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27th Annual IFP Gotham Awards Nominations

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The Independent Filmmaker Project (IFP), the nation’s premier member organization of independent storytellers, announced yesterday the nominees for the 27th Annual IFP Gotham Awards. For 2017, ten competitive awards will be presented to independent features and series.

In addition to the competitive awards, Gotham Award Tributes will be given to actors Nicole Kidman and Dustin Hoffman, director Sofia Coppola, producer Jason Blum, cinematographer Ed Lachman, and a Gotham Humanitarian Tribute to Al Gore.

The Gotham Awards is one of the leading awards for independent film and signals the kick-off to the film awards season. As the first major awards ceremony of the film season, the IFP Awards provide critical early recognition and media attention to worthy independent films. The awards are also unique for their ability to assist in catapulting award recipients prominently into national awards season attention.

This year offered a bountiful array of diverse, creative work that represents the very best from this community. We’re thrilled to celebrate these achievements,” said Joana Vicente, Executive Director of IFP and the Made in NY Media Center.

Thirty-four films and series received nominations this year. In addition, the nominating committee for the Best Actor and Best Actress categories voted to award a Special Jury Award to the ensemble cast of Mudbound.

Surprisingly a scary movie, Get Out by Jordan Peele, leads with four (4) nominations but four strong contenders follow very close with three (3) noms each, Lady Bird by Greta Gerwig, Call Me by Your Name by Luca Guadagnino, Columbus by Kogonada and The Florida Project by Sean Baker.

As many do, I also believe that 2017 is a great year for independent filmmaking but we have to see what happens as the rule of thumb is that when it comes to major awards, independent films tend to cease to be visible.  Perhaps this year is the exception to the rule as there are films by well-known filmmakers plus debut films by renown actors.  Besides the previous paragraph films there are several others to be considered, for example, Graig Gillespie's I, Tonya, the Safdie brothers'Good Time and Dee Rees'Mudbound which already collected a special ensemble award.

The 2017 IFP Gotham Independent Film Award nominations are:

Feature Films

Best Feature
Call Me by Your Name, Luca Guadagnino
Get Out, Jordan Peele
Good Time, Josh and Benny Safdie
I, Tonya, Craig Gillespie
The Florida Project, Sean Baker

Best Documentary
Ex Libris - The New York Public Library, Frederick Wiseman
Rat Film, Theo Anthony
Strong Island, Yance Ford
Whose Streets?, Sabaah Folayan and Damon Davis
The Work, Jairus McLeary

Bingham Ray Breaktrhrough Director Award
Maggie Betts for Novitiate
Greta Gerwig for Lady Bird
Kogonada for Columbus
Jordan Peele for Get Out
Joshua Z Weinstein for Menashe

Best Screenplay
Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani for The Big Stick, Michael Showalter
Mike White for Brad's Status, Mike White
James Ivory for Call Me by Your Name, Luca Guadagnino
Kogonada for Columbus, Kogonada
Jordan Peele for Get Out, Jordan Peele
Greta Gerwig for Lady Bird, Greta Gerwig

Best Actress
Melanie Lynskey in I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore, Macon Blair
Haley Lu Richardson in Columbus, Kogonada
Margot Robbie in I, Tonya,  Craig Gillespie
Saoirse Ronan in Lady Bird, Greta Gerwig
Lois Smith in Marjorie Prime, Michael Almereyda

Best Actor
William Dafoe in The Florida Project, Sean Baker
James Franco in The Disaster Artist, James Franco
Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out, Jordan Peele
Robert Pattinson in Good Time, Safdie brothers
Adam Sandler in The Meherowitz Stories (New and Selected), Noah Baumbach
Harry Dean Stanton in Lucky, John Carroll Lynch

Breakthrough Actor
Mary J. Blige in Mudbound, Dee Rees
Timothée Chalamet in Call Me by Your Name, Luca Guadagnino
Harris Dickinson in Beach Rats, Eliza Hittman
Kelvin Harrison Jr. in It Comes at Night, Trey Edward Shults
Brooklyn Prince in The Florida Project, Sean Baker

Special Gotham Jury Award for Ensemble Performance: Carey Mulligan, Garrett Hedlund, Jason Clarke, Jason Mitchell, Mary J. Blige, Rob Morgan, and Jonathan Banks in Mudbound


Series (TV and Online)

Breakthrough Series - Long Form
Atlanta
Better Things
Dear White People
Fleabag
Search Party

Breakthrough Series - Short Form
555
Inconceivable
Junior
Let Me Die a Nun
The Strange Eyes of Dr. Myes

Nominees are selected by committees of film critics, journalists, festival programmers, and film curators. Separate juries of writers, directors, actors, producers, editors and others directly involved in making films will determine the final Gotham Award recipients.

The Gotham Awards ceremony will be held on Monday, November 27th at Cipriani Wall Street.

Twenty-eight writers, critics and programmers participated in the nomination process. The Nominating Committees for the 2017 IFP Gotham Independent Film Awards were:

Nominating Committee for Best Feature, Best Screenplay, and Breakthrough Director
Justin Chang, Film Critic, Los Angeles Times
Peter Debruge, Chief Film Critic, Variety
Christy Lemire, Film Critic, RogerEbert.com; Co-host of What the Flick?!
David Rooney, Chief Theater Critic, The Hollywood Reporter
Joshua Rothkopf, Global Deputy Film Editor, Time Out New York

Nominating Committee for Best Documentary
Ben Fowlie, Executive Director, Points North Institute; Founder, Camden International Film Festival
Cynthia Fuchs, Film & TV Reviews, PopMatters; Director of Film & Media Studies, George Mason University
Eric Kohn, Deputy Editor & Chief Critic, Indiewire
Mike Maggiore, Programmer, Film Forum
Alissa Wilkinson, Film Critic, Vox

Nominating Committee for Best Actor and Best Actress
A.A. Dowd, Film Editor, The A.V. Club
David Ehrlich, Senior Film Critic, Indiewire
Tim Grierson, Senior U.S. Critic, Screen International; Chief Film Critic, Paste
Sheila O’Malley, Writer/Film Critic, RogerEbert.com, The Sheila Variations
Alison Willmore, Film Critic, BuzzFeed News; Co-host Filmspotting: Streaming Video Unit

Nominating Committee for Breakthrough Actor
Bilge Ebiri, Film Critic, Village Voice
David Sims, Senior Associate Editor, The Atlantic
Brian Tallerico, Film Editor, RogerEbert.com
Katie Walsh, Film Critic, Tribune Content Agency, Los Angeles Times
Emily Yoshida, Film Critic, New York Magazine/Vulture.com

Nominating Committee for Breakthrough Series – Long Form
Sophie Gilbert, Staff Writer, Culture, The Atlantic
Tim Goodman, Chief Television Critic, The Hollywood Reporter
Liz Shannon Miller, TV Editor, Indiewire
Sonia Saraiya, TV Critic, Variety
Matt Zoller Seitz, Editor-in-Chief, RogerEbert.com; TV Critic, New York Magazine/Vulture.com

Nominating Committee for Breakthrough Series – Short Form
Jude Dry, Reporter, Critic, Indiewire
Randi Kleiner, Founder & CEO, SeriesFest
Paula Mejia, Associate Editor, Atlas Obscura; Author, Jesus and Mary Chain’s Psychocandy

Gotham Independent Film Audience Award
IFP members will determine the Gotham Independent Film Audience Award with nominees comprised of the 14 nominated films in the Best Feature, Best Documentary, and Bingham Ray Breakthrough Director Award categories.

Breakthrough Series – Short Form
IFP members will determine the winner from among the five nominees for this award by viewing and voting for them online.

All IFP current, active members at the Individual Level and above will be eligible to vote for these audience-determined categories. Voting will take place online from November 17th at 12:01 AM EST and conclude on November 25th at 5:00 PM EST. In addition, IFP will be scheduling screenings of the nominated films for IFP members in the theater at the Made in NY Media Center by IFP in Brooklyn. These screenings will take place from November 10-21.

Appendix
2017 IFP Gotham Awards – Alphabetical List of Nominated Films & Series

4 Nominations
Get Out
Best Feature
Breakthrough Director
Best Screenplay
Best Actor

3 Nominations

Call Me by Your Name
Best Feature
Best Screenplay
Breakthrough Actor

Columbus
Breakthrough Director
Best Screenplay
Best Actress

The Florida Project
Best Feature
Best Actor
Breakthrough Actor

Lady Bird
Breakthrough Director
Best Screenplay
Best Actress

2 Nominations

Good Time
Best Feature
Best Actor

I, Tonya
Best Feature
Best Actress

Mudbound
Jury Award Ensemble Performance
Breakthrough Actor

1 Nomination
555 -Breakthrough Series – Short Form
Atlanta - Breakthrough Series – Long Form
Beach Rats -Breakthrough Actor
Better Things - Breakthrough Series – Long Form
The Big Sick -  Best Screenplay
Brad’s Status -Best Screenplay
Dear White People -Breakthrough Series – Long Form
The Disaster Artist - Best Actor
Ex Libris – The New York Public Library - Best Documentary
Fleabag - Breakthrough Series – Long Form
I Don’t Feel at Home in This World Anymore - Best Actress
Inconceivable - Breakthrough Series – Short Form
It Comes at Night - Breakthrough Actor
Junior - Breakthrough Series – Short Form
Let Me Die a Nun - Breakthrough Series – Short Form
Lucky - Best Actor
Marjorie Prime - Best Actress
Menashe - Breakthrough Director
The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) -Best Actor
Novitiate - Breakthrough Director
Rat Film - Best Documentary
Search Party - Breakthrough Series – Long Form
The Strange Eyes of Dr. Myes - Breakthrough Series – Short Form
Strong Island - Best Documentary
Whose Streets? - Best Documentary
The Work - Best Documentary

30th European Film Awards Nominations - In Progress

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The European Film Academy in the past few weeks has been announcing nominations for some categories, but major categories will be announced at the press conference on November 4 in the Seville European Film Festival; consequently, this post will be In Progress until that date.

Worth noting that the 30th anniversary award ceremony will be in Berlin on Saturday, December 9, 2017 and will be streamed live at the awards official site and broadcast across Europe.

The following are the #EFA2017 nominations.  The nominated films will soon be submitted to the more than 3,000 EFA members to elect the winner.

European Film

European Comedy
King of the Belgians, Jessica Woodworth and Peter Brosens, Belgium, Netherlands and Bulgaria
The Square, Ruben Östlund, Sweden, Germany, France and Denmark
Vincent (Vincent and the End of the World), Christophe van Rompaey, Belgium and France
Willkommen bei den Hartmanns (Welcome to Germany), Simon Verhoeven, Germany



European Discovery - Prix FIPRESCI
Petit Paysan (Bloody Milk), Hubert Charuel, France
БЕЗБОГ Bezbog (Godless), Ralitza Petrova, Bulgaria, Denmark and France
Lady Macbeth, William Oldroyd, UK
Estiu 1993 (Summer 1993), Carla Simón, Spain
Die Einsiedler (The Eremites), Ronny Trocker, Germany



European Animated Film
Ethel & Ernest, Roger Mainwood, UK and Luxembourg
Louise by the Shore,  Jean-François Laguionie, France and Canada
Loving Vincent, Dorota Kobiela and Hugh Welchman, Poland and UK
Zombillénium, Arthur de Pins and Alexis Ducord, France and Belium



European Documentary

European Director

European Actress

European Actor

European Screenwriter

European University Film Award (EUFA)
Hjartasteinn (Heartsone), Guðmundur Arnar Guðmundsson, Iceland and Denmark
Home, Fien Troch, Belgium
Нелюбо́вь Nelyubov (Loveless), Andrei Zvagintsev, Russia, Belgium, Germany and France
Toivon Tuolla Puolen (The Other Side of Hope), Aki Kaurismäki, Finland and Germany
The War Show, Andreas Dalsgaard and Obaidah Zytoon, Denmark, Syria and Finland



European Short Film
Copa-Loca, Christos Massalas, Greece, 14'
En La Boca, Matteo Gariglio, Switzerland and Argentina, 25' (documentary)
Fight On A Swedish Beach!!, Simon Vahine, Sweden, 15'
Gros Chagrin (You Will Be Fine), Céline Devaux, France, 15' (animation)
Havêrk (The Circle), Rûken Tekeş, Turkey, 14'
Information Skies, Metahaven, Netherlands and South Korea,  24' (experimental)
Jeunes Hommes à la fenêtre (Young Men at their Window), Loukianos Moshonas, France, 18'
Los Desheredados (The Disinherited), Laura Ferrés, Spain, 18'
Love, Réka Bucsi, Hungary and France, 16' (animation)
Os Humores Artificiais (The Artificial Humors), Gabriel Abrantes, Portugal, 30'
Scris/Nescris (Written/Unwritten), Adrian Silisteanu, Romania, 20'
The Party, Andrea Harkin, Ireland, 14'
Timecode, Juanjo Giménez, Spain, 15'
Ugly, Redbear Easterman and Nikita Diakur, 12'
Wannabe, Jannis Lenz, Austria and Germany, 29'



Carlo di Palma European Cinematographer Award:
European Editor
European Production Designer
European Costume Designer
European Composer
European Sound Designer

People's Choice Award for Best European Film
A Monster Calls, J.A. Bayona, Spain
Bacalaureat (Graduation), Cristian Mungiu, Romania, France and Belgium
Bridget Jones's Baby, Sharon Maguire, UK, France and USA
Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them, David Yates, UK and USA
Frantz, François Ozon, France and Germany
La Pazza Gioia (Like Crazy), Paolo Virzi, Italy and France
Kollektivet (The Commune), Thomas Vinterberg, Denmark, Sweden, Netherlands
Toivon Tuolla Puolen (The Other Side of Hope), Aki Kaurismäki, Finland and Germany
Von der Morgenrote (Stefan Zweig-Farewell to Europe), Maria Scharader, Germany, Austria and France



European Co-Production Award - Prix Eurimages:
European Film Academy Lifetime Achievement Award: Aleksandr Sokurov
European Achievement in World Cinema: Julie Delpy
Honorary Award of the EFA President and Board:

20th British Independent Film Awards Nominations

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Yesterday Maisie Williams and Hayle Squires announced the nominations for the milestone 20th anniversary of an event that celebrates independent cinema.  There are some films that  could be interesting to watch but the biggest surprise is to find among the nominees a film that has strong Oscar buzz, which means film could do well in British and American awards circuit/season; we'll soon see if BAFTA also honors film with nominations.  Yes, I'm talking about Three Billboards ...

In total there are 35 British feature films nominated. Lady Macbeth leads with fifteen (15) nominations followed by The Death of Stalin and I Am Not a Witch with 13 noms plus God's Own Country and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri with 11 nominations.

Debut features dominate the nominations list, with the first-time writers, producers and directors of Lady Macbeth, I Am Not a Witch and God’s Own Country all recognized in the three newcomer categories – Debut Screenwriter, Breakthrough Producer and The Douglas Hickox Award for Best Debut Director – as well as Best Screenplay, Best Director and Best British Independent Film.

BIFA said, “This year’s nominations showcase the range and quality of British independent filmmaking. It’s a diverse and varied list, in terms of the teams making the films and also the kinds of stories being told. It is especially encouraging to see so much exciting work from so many new filmmakers; this points to a very bright future for British cinema and we’re proud to be at the heart of it, celebrating these exceptional films.”

The Nominations

Best British Independent Film
God's Own Country
I'm Not a Witch
Lady Macbeth
The Death of Stalin
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

The Discovery Award
Even When I Fall
Halfway
In Another Life
Isolani
My Pure Land

Best Documentary
Almost Heaven
Half Way
Kingdom of Us
Uncle Howard
Williams

Best International Independent Film
The Florida Project, Sean Baker
Get Out, Jordan Peele
I Am Not Your Negro, Raoul Peck
Loveless, Andrei Zvyagintsev
The Square, Ruben Ostlund

Best Director
Armando Iannucci for The Death of Stalin
Francis Lee for God's Own Country
Riungano Nyoni for I Am Not a Witch
William Oldroyd for Lady Macbeth
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

The Douglas HIckox Award - Debut Director
Francis Lee for God's Own Country
Rungano Nyoni for I Am Not a Witch
Thomas Napper for Jawbone
William Oldroyd for Lady Macbeth
Deborah Haywood for Pin Cushion

Best Cinematography
David Gallego for I Am Not a Witch
Tat Radcliffe for Jawbone
Ari Wegner for Lady Macbeth
Thomas Riedelsheimer for Leaning Into the Wind
Ben Davis for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Screenplay
Armando Iannucci, David Schneider and Ian Martin for The Death of Stalin
Francis Lee for God's Own Country
Rungano Nyoni for I Am Not a Witch
Alice Birch for Lady Macbeth
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Debut Screenwriter
Francis Lee for God's Own Country
Rungano Nyoni for I Am Not a Witch
Johnny Harris for Jawbone
Alice Birch for Lady Macbeth
Gaby Chiappe for Their Finest

Best Actress
Emily Beecham in Daphne
Ruth Wilson in Dark River
Margaret Mulubwa in I Am Not a Witch
Florence Pugh in Lady Macbeth
Frances McDormand in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Supporting Actress
Andrea Riseborough in The Death of Stalin
Julie Walters in Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
Kelly Macdonald in Goodbye Christopher Robin
Naomi Ackie in Lady Macbeth
Patricia Clarkson in The Party

Best Actor
Jamie Bell in Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
Josh O'Connor in God's Own Country
Alec Secareanu in God's Own Country
Johnny Harris in Jawbone
Paddy Considine in Journeyman

Best Supporting Actor
Steve Buscemi in The Death of Stalin
Simon Russell Beale in The Death of Stalin
Ian Hart in God's Own Country
Woody Harrelson in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Sam Rockwell in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Most Promising Newcomer
Harry Michell in Chubby Funny
Harry Gilby in Just Charlie
Cosmo Jarvis in Lady Macbeth
Naomi Ackie in Lady Macbeth
Lily Newmark in Pin Cushion

Best Casting
Sarah Crowe for The Death of Stalin
Debbie McWilliams for Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
Shaheen Baig and Layla Merrick-Wolf for God's Own Country
Shaheen Baig for Lady Macbeth
Sarah Halley Finn for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Costume Design
Suzie Harman for The Death of Stalin
Sandy Powell for How To Talk to Girls at Parties
Holly Rebecca for I Am Not a Witch
Holly Waddington for Lady Macbeth
Dinah Collin for My Cousin Rachel

Best Editing
Peter Lambert for The Death of Stalin
David Charap for Jawbone
Jon Gregory for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Joe Martin for Us and Them
Johnny Burke for Williams

Best Make-Up and Hair Design
Jan Sewell for Breathe
Nicole Stafford for The Death of Stalin
Julene Paton for I Am Not a Witch
Nadia Stacey for Journeyman
Sian Wilson for Lady Macbeth

Best Music
Christopher Willis for The Death of Stalin
Matt Kelly for I Am Not a Witch
Paul Weller for Jawbone
Fred Frith for Leaning Into the Wind
Carter Burwell for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Production Design
Cristina Casali for The Death of Stalin
Eve Stewart for Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
James Merifield for Final Portrait
Nathan Parker for I Am Not a Witch
Jacqueline Abrahams for Lady Macbeth

Best Sound
Breathe
Anna Bertmark for God's Own Country
Maiken Hansen for I Am Not a Witch
Andy Shelley and Steve Griffiths for Jawbone
Joakim Sundstrom for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Effects
The Death of Stalin
Dan Martin for Double Date
Luke Dodd for Journeyman
Nick Allder and Ben White for The Ritual
Chris Reynolds for Their Finest

Breakthrough Producer
Brendan Mullin and Katy Jackson for Bad Day for the Cut
Jack Tarling and Manon Ardisson for God's Own Country
Emily Morgan for I Am Not a Witch
Fodhla Cronin O'Reilly for Lady Macbeth
Gavin Humphries for Pin Cushion

Best British Short
1745
The Entertainer
Fish Story
Work
Wren Boys

To check each film brief info at official site go here.

As previously announced, Gary Oldman will receive The Variety Award at the ceremony.The Variety Award recognizes a director, actor, writer or producer who has made a global impact and helped to focus the international spotlight on the UK.

Vanessa Redgrave is to receive The Richard Harris Award in recognition of the outstanding work within the British film industry.

Winners will be announced by host Mark Gatiss at the British Independent Film Awards Ceremony on Sunday 10 December at Old Billingsgate.

30th European Film Awards Winners - In Progress

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Today the European Film Academy announced the first award winners for the 2017 edition but the major categories will be announced during the awards ceremony next December 9; consequently, post will be in progress until that date.

A special seven-member jury convened in Berlin and, based on the EFA Selection list and the additional film entries, decided on the winners in the categories cinematography, editing, production design, costume design, hair & make-up, composer and sound design.

These are the winners

European Cinematographer - Prix Carlo di Palma: Michall Krichman for Нелюбо́вь Nelyubov (Loveless), Andrey Zvyagintsev, Russia, Belgium, Germany and France
The cold eye of Michail Krichman guides us through the film’s dark universe, consequently constructing an intense feeling of discomfort. The camera conveys a strong sense of darkness, emptiness and sadness. The choice of what is shown and what stays hidden, gives tremendous weight to every movement of the camera, every carefully constructed frame. Ascetic and well-measured cinematic means evoke an uncanny sense of anxiety, a slight internal tremor.

European Editor: Robin Campillo for 120 Battements par minute (BPM (Beats per minute)), Robin Campillo, France
From the very beginning, Robin Campillo’s editing underlines perfectly the desperate personal urgency of the ACT UP activists and their manifestations. Be it at a pharmaceutical corporation or at a conference, the edit makes the tempo and contributes to the urgency of the film in perfect harmony with framing and story. 

European Production Designer: Josefin Åsberg for The Square, Ruben Östlund, Sweden, Germany, France and Denmark
With great artistic sensibility, the production design in THE SQUARE elevates the film by creating a world at the edge to the surreal. In this way the scenography is able to integrate and interact with the story without ever dominating over it. This is the great artistic quality of Josefin Åsberg.


European Costume Designer: Katarzyna Lewińska for Pokot (Spoor), Agnieszka Holland and Kasia Adamik, Poland, Germany, Czech Republic, Sweden and Slovakia
The simplicity and clarity of the costumes intensify the images and underline the substantial message of the film. The clash between the human element and the natural environment is reflected in the texture, the colours and the design of the costumes, at the same time contributing to the personality of the characters and giving them life. They form an integral part of the storytelling, along with all the other visual elements, and together they create a powerful viewing experience.


European Hair & Make-up Artist: Leendert van Nimwegen for Brimstone, Martin Koolhoven, Netherlands, France, Germany, Belgium, Sweden, UK and USA
In BRIMSTONE, Leendert van Nimwegen, with make-up and hair, helps the characters and their development throughout the film, from play- and colourful, to sober and sinister, the good, the bad, the young, the old. It is a perfect combination of hair and make-up to describe characters, so beautifully done, and making them real.

European Composer: Evgueni and Sacha Galperine for Нелюбо́вь Nelyubov (Loveless), Andrey Zvyagintsev, Russia, Belgium, Germany and France
The dark, haunting and brooding music intensifies the experience of watching the film. Beautifully written, with an intelligent use of piano effects, the score works like an extra character added to the unfortunate family. From beginning to end, the music captivates the underlying tensions, the hidden truths and lies, and guides you through the story, without being too overtly present.

European Sound Designer: Oriol Tarragó for A Monster Calls, J.A. Bayona, Spain
The sound design in A MONSTER CALLS is the power of imagination. Sonically, it takes us into a completely new, unknown world, and does exactly what the filmmaker wants the audience to feel when they’re watching something unfold on screen: It creates a sense of eeriness, a sense of mood, a sense of darkness … resulting in a well-crafted collaboration between sound and visuals.

The members of the jury that selected the seven EFA awards.
Samir Fočo, sound designer, Bosnia & Herzegovina
Raf Keunen, composer, Belgium
Melanie Ann Oliver, editor, UK
Vassilia Rozana, costume designer, Greece
Susana Sanchez, hair & make-up artist, Spain
Łukasz Żal, cinematographer, Poland
Tonino Zera, production designer, Italy

2018 Film Independent Spirit Award Nominations

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Recently organizers announced the nominations and perhaps the most interesting situation is what is written in the first paragraph of the official nominations press release which reads as follows:

The past couple months of entertainment news have not been the cheeriest, to say the least. But as the necessary work of righting longstanding injustices continues, the importance of elevating new and diverse voices inside the film industry remains. And while awards shows may seem like small potatoes in the face of larger global events, the fact remains: championing creative independence and supporting a diverse community of unique, innovative artists remains vitally important—sowing the seeds via pop culture of a better, more equitable future.

Yes we are in turbulent times as finally rocks are being turned and the dirtiest dirt is being exposed, no doubt what's going on affects all kind of occupations in all kind of industries, but no doubt that the one that's being hit the hardest is the entertainment business and yes, I'm glad so many women have the courage to make public what they were forced to keep silent.  Let's hope creativity could flourish even more now when women could stop being afraid of speaking out.

So on Tuesday, November 21, 2017 Lily Collins and Tessa Thompson at the Jeremy hotel in West Hollywood unveiled the nominees in a year where I believe where too-many good indie films and many were bound to be left out and so it happened.  Perhaps the most notorious are the absence of best film nod for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, no nods at all for much-honored Guillermo del Toro's The Shape of Water and gee, Greta Gerwig opera prima gets no directorial nod, not even in the debut category.  Another annoying absence is Noah Baumbach's The Meyerowitz Stories.  Know Yorgos Lanthimos is not for all audiences but imagined more honors for this film, including perhaps a nod for Colin Farrell.

On the other side of the nods, can't understand the fuzz for Beatriz at Dinner, a film that was so-terrible had to stop watching, sigh.  Movie got a best actress nod that perhaps belonged to Rooney Mara in Ghost Story or many other great performances.

Perhaps a bit surprising due to the controversy it has generated mainly in "good-old-USA" Luca Guadagnino's Call Me By Your Name leads with six (6) nominations followed closely by Get Out and Good Time with 5 nods each and Lady Bird with four nominations.

These are the nominees

Best Feature
Call Me By Your Name, Luca Guadagnino
The Florida Project, Sean Baker
Get Out, Jordan Peele
Lady Bird, Greta Gerwig
The Rider, Chloé Zhao



Best First Feature
Columbus, Kogonada
Ingrid Goes West, Matt Spicer
Menashe, Joshua Z. Weinstein
Oh Lucy!, Atsuko Hirayanagi
Patti Cake$, Geremy Jasper

Best International Film
BPM (Beats per Minute), Robin Campillo, France
A Fantastic Woman, Sebastian Lelio, Chile
I Am Not A Witch, Rungano Nyoni, UK
Lady Macbeth, William Oldroyd, UK
Loveless, Andrey Zvyagintsev, Russia

Best Documentary
The Departure, Lana Wilson
Faces Places, Agnes Varda and JR
Last Men in Aleppo, Feras Fayyad
Motherland, Ramona S. Diaz
Quest, Jonathan Olshefski

Best Director
Sean Baker for The Florida Project
Jonas Carpignano for A Ciambra
Luca Guadagnino for Call Me by Your Name
Jordan Peele for Get Out
Ben Safdie and Josh Safdie for Good Time
Chloé Zhao for The Rider

Best Screenplay
Greta Gerwig for Lady Bird
Azazel Jacobs for The Lovers
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Jordan Peele for Get Out
Mike White for Beatriz at Dinner

Best First Screenplay
Kris Avendisian, Kyle Espeleta and Jesse Wakeman for Donald Cried
Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani for The Big Stick
Ingrid Jungermann for Women Who Kill
Kogonada for Columbus
David Smith and Matt Spicer for Ingrid Goes West

John Cassavetes Award
Dayveon, Amman Abbasi
A Ghost Story, David Lowery
Life and Nothing More, Antonio Mendez Esparza
Most Beautiful Island, Ana Asensio
The Transfiguration, Michael O'Shea

Best Female Lead
Salma Hayek inBeatriz at Dinner
Frances McDormand in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Margot Robbie in I, Tonya
Saorise Ronan in Lady Bird
Regina Williams in Life and Nothing More
Shinobu Terajima in Oh Lucy!

Best Supporting Female
Holly Hunter in The Big Sick
Allison Janney in I, Tonya
Laurie Metcalf in Lady Bird
Lois Smith in Marjorie Prime
Taliah Lennice Webster in Good Time

Best Male Lead
Harris Dickinson in Beach Rats
Timothée Chalamet in Call Me by Your Name
Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out
Robert Pattinson in Good Time
James Franco in The Disaster Artist

Best Supporting Male
Nnamdi Asomugha in Crown Heights
Arnie Hammer in Call Me by Your Name
Barry Keoghan in The Killing of a Sacred Deer
Sam Rockwell in Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri
Benny Safdie in Good Time

Best Cinematography
Thimios Bakatakis for The Killing of a Sacred Deer
Elisha Christian for Columbus
Hélène Louvart for Beach Rats
Sayombhu Mukdeeprom for Call Me by Your Name
Joshua James Richards for The Rider

Best Editing
Ronald Bronstein and Benny Safdie for Good Time
Walter Fasano for Call Me by Your Name
Alex O'Flinn for The Rider
Gregory Plotkin for Get Out
Tatiana S. Riegel for I, Tonya

Robert Altman Award
Given to one film's director, casting director and ensemble cast
Mudbound
Director: Dee Rees
Casting Directors: Billy Hopkins and Ashley Ingram
Ensemble Cast: Jonathan Banks, Mary J. Blige, Jason Clarke, Garrett Hedlund, Jason Mitchell, Rob Morgan and Carey Mulligan

Truer Than Fiction Award
Presented to an emerging director of non-fiction features who has not yet received significant recognition
Jeff Unay for The Cage Fighter
Shevaun Mizrahi for Distant Constellation
Jonathan Olshefski for Quest

Someone To Watch Award
Recognizes a talented filmmaker of singular vision who has not yet received appropriate recognition
Amman Abbasi for Dayveon
Justin Chon for Gook
Kevin Phillips for Super Dark Times

Producers Award
Honors emerging producers who, despite highly limited resources demonstrate creativity, tenacity and vision required to produce quality, independent films.
Giulia Caruso and Ki Jin Kim
Ben LeClair
Summer Shelton

Bonnie Award
Recognizes a mid-career female director
So Yong Kim
Lynn Shelton
Chloé Zhao

Now Film Independent members have to vote to select winners in each category.  Awards ceremony  will be in the beach in Santa Monica on March 3, 2018 and will be broadcast live on IFC at 2p PT/5 ET. Hosts are Nick Kroll and John Mulaney.



11th Asia Pacific Screen Awards Winners

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Yesterday tried to watch the awards ceremony live stream but was not interesting at all especially because it took too long to get to honoring winners and when finally -after a long piano break- started with the first award the sound went off.  So gave up.

Nevertheless checked winners and today its time to do the post.  According to official press release there are some milestones like it's the first ever APSA win for Georgia; Georgia and Russia Federation have top winner tally with three wins each, and most interesting, majority of Best Feautre awards go to female-directed films.

Notable is Warwick Thornton who became the first director to have two films win APSA Best Feature Film and to be the only Australian director to have a film win in this category.  Will say does not surprise me his top award win which believe is a major honor as was competing against extraordinary films by Samuel Maoz and Sergei Loznitsa.



The Winners

Best Feature Film: Sweet Country, Warwick Thorton, Australia

Jury Grand Prize: Aritmiya (Arrhythmia), Boris Khlebnikov, Russia

Best Youth Feature: Sekala Niskala (The Seen and Unseen),  Kamila Andini, Indonesia, Netherlands, Australia and Qatar

Best Animated Feature:  Window Horses: The Poetic Persian Epiphany of Rosie Ming, Ann Marie Fleming, Canada

Best Documentary: Last Men in Aleppo, Feras Fayyad, Syria, Denmark and Germany
Special Mention: Kim Dotcom: Caught in the Web, Annie Goldson, New Zealand

Achievement in Directing: Andrey Zvyagintsev for Nelyubov (Loveless), Russia, Belgium, France and Germany

Achievement in Cinematography: Timofey Lobov and Pyotr Dukhovskoi for Meshok Bez Dna (The Bottomless Bag), Rustam Khamdamov, Russia

Best Screenplay: Mayank Tewari and Amit V. Masurkar for Newton, Amit V Masurkar, India

Best Performance by an Actress: Nata Murvanidze in Sashishi Deda (Scary Mother), Anna Urushadze, Georgia and Estonia

Best Performance by an Actor: Rajkummar Rao in Newton, Amit V Masurkar, India
Special Mention: Navid Mohammadzadeh in Bedoune Tarikh, Bedoune Emza (No Date, No Signature), Vahid Jalilvand, Iran

UNESCO  Cultural Diversity Award: Dede, Mariam Khatchvani, Georgia, Croatia, Netherlands, Qatar and UK
Special Mention: Loktak Lairembee (Lady of the Lake), Haobam Paban Kumar

Artistic Acknowledgement: Abbas Kiarostami, 24 Frames
Young Cinema Award:Nar Bagi (Pomegranate Orchard), Ilgar Najaf, Azerbaijan
FIAPF Award: Bianca Balbuena, Philippines

2017 Recipients of the MPA APSA Academy Film Fund
Chosen from 105 projects from 34 countries
Rajit Kaput for Paradise in Flames, India
Robert Connolly for Magic Beach, Australia
Guy Davidi for Senseless, Israel
Vladimer Katacharava for Nene, Georgia

To read info about each of the winning films and more, go to official site here.


2017 National Board of Review Awards Winners

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A few hours ago the NBR announced their awards winners and its choices gives us a possible trend into the Awards Season than will not be surprising but predictable, as their top award went to big -really big- The Post plus the top acting awards to film leads, Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks.  Of course I'm looking forward to see film, but with all the available options was hoping for more "exciting" results.

On the plus side, Greta Gerwig winning Best Director is exciting and let's hope winning strike continues with other groups.

NBR President Annie Schulhof said, “The Post is a beautifully crafted film that deeply resonates at this moment in time. We are so thrilled to award it our best film as well as to honor the wonderfully talented Greta Gerwig as our Best Director.

These awards are the latest citation of excellence by the National Board of Review, a tradition going back 108 years. This year 265 films were viewed by this select group of film enthusiasts, filmmakers, professionals, academics, students, many of which were followed by in-depth discussions with directors, actors, producers, and screenwriters.

The honorees will be feted at the National Board of Review Awards Gala, hosted by Willie Geist, on Tuesday, January 9, 2018 at Cipriani 42nd Street, NY.

The full list of the 2017 award recipients:

Best FilmThe Post
Best Animated Feature: Coco
Best Foreign Language Film: Foxtrot
Best Documentary: Jane

Best Director: Greta Gerwig for Lady Bird
Best Directorial Debut: Jordan Peele for Get Out

Best Actress: Meryl Streep in The Post
Best Supporting Actress: Laurie Metcalf in Lady Bird
Best Actor: Tom Hanks in The Post
Best Supporting Actor: Willem Dafoe in The Florida Project
Breakthrough Performance: Timothée Chalamet in Call Me by Your Name
Best Ensemble: Get Out

Best Original Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson for Phantom Thread
Best Adapted Screenplay: Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber for The Disaster Artist

Spotlight Award:  Patty Jenkins and Gal Gadot for Wonder Woman
NBR Freedom of Expression Award
First They Killed My Father
Let it Fall: Los Angeles 1982-1992

As usual film group published their top lists

Top Films
Baby Driver
Call Me by Your Name
The Disaster Artist
Downsizing
Dunkirk
The Florida Project
Get Out
Lady Bird
Logan
Phantom Thread

Top 5 Foreign Language Films
A Fantastic Woman
Frantz
Loveless
Summer 1993
The Square

Top 5 Documentaries
Abacus: Small Enough to Jail
Brimstone & Glory
Eric Clapton: Life in 12 Bars
Faces Places
Hell On Earth: The Fall of Syria and the Rise of ISIS

Top 10 Independent Films
Beatriz at Dinner
Brigsby Bear
Lady Macbeth
Logan Lucky
Loving Vincent
Menashe
Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer
Patty Cake$
Wind River

27th Annual IFP Gotham Awards Winners

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Last Monday, November 27th, the Independent Filmmaker Project (IFP) announced the winners of the current edition of the annual Gotham Awards at a ceremony hosted by John Cameron Mitchell and held at Cipriani Wall Street in New York City.

Wasn't able to watch ceremony live but was able to see a couple of tweets that made me laugh loud as one was saying something like this:  "Who is that guy?" referring of course to wonderful real-life character and film director extraordinaire John Cameron Mitchell; another questions his ensemble piece that wasn't until saw Mitchell's photos understood why can someone who isn't familiar with his outstanding/remarkable looks will question what he's wearing, lol!  He is just fab but can understand if someone haven't seen him before will have extreme reactions, either you love him or you hate him.  I do love him and enjoy every single time he's on shows like for example, the Good Wife.

Get Out got the most nominations and perhaps not surprising also got the most wins by winning two out of the four nominations it got plus the Audience Award to a total of three (3) wins but top award didn't go to this film as went to Luca Guadagnino's Call Me by Your Name, a film that also was honored with the Breakthrough Actor award to Thimothee Chalamet.

These are the winners

Best FilmCall Me by Your Name, Luca Guadagnino
Best DocumentaryStrong Island, Yance Ford

Breakthrough Director Award:  Jordan Peele for Get Out

Best Screenplay: Jordan Peele for Get Out

Best Actress: Saorise Ronan in Lady Bird
Best Actor:  James Franco in The Disaster Artist
Breakthrough Actor: Thimothee Chalamet in Call Me by Your Name
Special Jury Award for Ensemble Performance: Carey Mulligan, Garrett Hedlund, Jason Clarke, Jason Mitchell, Mary J. Blige, Rob Morgan and Jonathan Banks in Mudbound

Audience AwardGet Out

Have to agree with those that comment Mudbound is an excellent movie and deserved more recognition than the ensemble award.  Mudbound slowly grabs you, takes you inside story and film; doesn't release you when it ends, you need a few minutes to break the spell. Kudos to Dee Rees for such magnificent and yet, very-simple straight-forward film.

Usually Gotham Awards do not signal a trend but I'm hoping this year becomes an exception and we see Guadagnino's and Gerwig's films collecting more honors in the 2017-2018 awards season.  Sigh.

2017 New York Film Critics Circle Awards Winners

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Early today the east coast group started to vote for their annual winners and seems that there is no visible trend from an independent film award and the two major film critics, as for example Best Film category in Gotham went to Call Me by Your Name, in NBR to The Post and the NYFCC to Lady Bird.  There are high probabilities current award season will be interesting and perhaps even unpredictable which makes all exercises a lot more fun.

The NYFCC also announced that this year's ceremony will be dedicated to the memory of late film critic, filmmaker and author Richard Schickel.  The awards will be handed out in New York in January.

In previous years the call-by-many "harbingers of the Oscars nominations" score have been on the lower side but last year score was on the positive side with La La Land, Moonlight and Manchester by the Sea got top and many awards.  So, if this year group repeats, Lady Bird, The Florida Project and Call Me By Your Name could get nominations.

My most expected win in the current award season was finally honored by this group, I really hope Faces Places run to finish line ends with Oscar for Best Documentary and I'm not alone as many in both side of the ocean are hoping for the honor that will give Agnes Varda the second Oscar in the same year.

The Winners. To check winners at official site go here.

Best Picture: Lady Bird
Best Animated Film:Coco
Best Non-Fiction Film: Faces Places
Best Foreign Language Film: BPM (Beats Per Minute)
Best First Film: Get Out

Best Director: Sean Baker for The Florida Project

Best Actress: Saoirse Ronan in Lady Bird
Best Supporting Actress: Tiffany Haddish in Girls Trip
Best Actor: Timothee Chalamet in Call Me by Your Name
Best Supporting Actor: Willem Dafoe in The Florida Project

Best Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson for Phantom Thread
Best Cinematographer: Rachel Morrison for Mudbound

Career Achievement Special Award: Molly Haskell

43rd Annual Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Winners

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The so-called "most powerful" group of American critics voted their 2017 awards and top award went to Luca Guadagnino's Call Me by Your Name which is a surprise in the sense that film in America was the object of negative reviews, especially those related to film story being about "gay statutory rape" (sic). Sigh.

Then, under group standards believe voting was "fast" as only took five-and-a-half hours and I recall voting for longer than six hours, lol.  Still was too-long for me to follow live.

Most interesting were the awards given to female actors as it's great to see outstanding Sally Hawkins being honored as she has had many-many great performances along her career and Laurie Metcalf being recognized for her work in the big screen.

No doubt that group liked Guadagnino's film but thanks to them Guillermo del Toro's latest film has been put in the awards race.  Notorious is how once again the west coast film critics honors differ from their colleagues in the east coast as basically agree in documentary and foreign-language film, in both actors categories and nothing else.  Can't wait for other film critics groups to announce their awards as can't see yet a clear trend among this influential group of people surrounding the film industry.

Group gives many awards and what is worth noting in this edition is the fact that winners are spread among many films and when also consider runner-ups the amount of films get larger, which only confirms that this awards season will be hard to predict and probably will honor more films than in previous years.  Also remarkable in this group is to notice that there are many independent film, more than studio films, which makes me wonder what could happen with the Oscars, would they remain loyal to studios or will they skew to independent?  In about a month we will know.

The 2017 Winners

Best Picture:Call Me by Your Name
Runner-up: The Florida Project

Best Animation: The Breadwinner
Runner-up: Coco

Best Documentary/Non-Fiction FilmFaces Places
Runner-up: Jane

Best Foreign-Language Film: (tie)
BPM (Beats Per Minute
Loveless

Best Director (tie)
Guillermo del Toro for The Shape of Water
Luca Guadagnino for Call Me by Your Name

Best Actress: Sally Hawkins in The Shape of Water
Runner-up: Frances Mcdormand in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Supporting Actress: Laurie Metcalf in Lady Bird
Runner-up: Mary J. Blige in Mudbound

Best Actor: Timothee Chalamet in Call Me by Your Name
Runner-up: James Franco in The Disaster Artist

Best Supporting Actor: Willem Dafoe in The Florida Project
Runner-up: Sam Rockwell in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Screenplay: Jordan Peele for Get Out
Runner-up: Martin Mcdonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Cinematography: Dan Lauster for The Shape of Water
Runner-up: Roger Deakins for Blade Runner

Best Production Design: Dennis Gassner for Blade Runner
Runner-up: Paul D. Austerberry for The Shape of Water

Best Editing:  Lee Smith for Dunkirk
Runner-up: Tatiana S. Riegel for I Tonya

Best Music Score: Jonny Greenwood for Phantom Thread
Runner-up: Alexandre Desplat for The Shape of Water

Douglas Edwards Independent/Experimental Film/Video:  Lee Anne Schmitt for Purge This Land

New Generation: Greta Gerwig
Career Achievement: Max Von Sydow

To check winners at official site go here.

23rd Annual Critics' Choice Movie Awards Nominations

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The Broadcast Film Critics Association (BFCA) announced today the nominees for the 2018 edition with The Shape of Water leading the pack with 14 nominations followed a bit far by Call Me by Your Name, Dunkirk, Lady Bird and The Post with 8 nominations each.

Blade Runner 2049 collected 7 nominations followed by The Big Sick and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri each with 6, and Get Out and I, Tonya with 5.  Group has a clear leader but as what is happening this year, there are several movies with multiple nominations and no mater how large the amount of films with nominations remarkable is that group adds no new film to the race of major categories as all have been already honored by other film critics groups.

2017 has proved to be an incredibly exciting year in movies – and one of the most wide-open in terms of awards possibilities,” said BFCA President Joey Berlin. “The mix of legendary filmmakers and performers along with vibrant new voices representing fresh and varied styles and perspectives has entertained and challenged critics and audiences alike. It’s been a joy to experience these films and we can’t wait to celebrate them all on January 11th.”

The awards show will return to the CW Network and will be broadcast LIVE on January 11, 2018 from 8:00 to 10:00pm ET.  As we all know the television branch also announced the TV nominations and if you wish to learn them go to official site here.

The nominations

Best Picture
The Big Sick
Call Me by Your Name
Darkest Hour
Dunkirk
The Florida Project
Get Out
Lady Bird
The Post
The Shape of Water
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Animated Feature
The Breadwinner
Coco
Despicable Me 3
The LEGO Batman Movie
Loving Vincent

Best Foreign Language Film
BPM (Beats Per Minute)
A Fantastic Woman
First They Killed My Father
In the Fade
The Square
Thelma

Best Director
Guillermo del Toro for The Shape of Water
Greta Gerwig for Lady Bird
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Christopher Nolan for Dunkirk
Luca Guadagnino for Call Me by Your Name
Jordan Peele for Get Out
Steve Spielberg for The Post

Best Actress
Jessica Chastain in Molly's Game
Sally Hawkins in The Shape of Water
Frances McDormand in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Margot Robbie in I, Tonya
Saoirse Ronan in Lady Bird
Meryl Streep in The Post

Best Supporting Actress
Mary J. Blige in Mudbound
Hong Chau in Downsizing
Tiffany Haddish in Girls Trip
Holly Hunter in The Big Sick
Allison Janney in I, Tonya
Laurie Metcalf in Lady Bird
Octavia Spencer in The Shape of Water

Best Actor
Timothee Chalamet in Call Me by Your Name
James Franco in The Disaster Artist
Jake Gyllenhall in Stronger
Tom Hanks in The Post
Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out
Daniel Day-Lewis in Phantom Thread
Gary Oldman in Darkest Hour

Best Supporting Actor
Willem Dafoe in The Florida Project
Armie Hammer in Call Me by Your Name
Richard Jenkins in The Shape of Water
Sam Rockwell in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Patrick Stewart in Logan
Michael Stunlbarg in Call Me by Your Name

Best Young Actor/Actress
Mckenna Grace in Gifted
Dafne Keen in Logan
Brooklyn Prince in The Florida Project
Millicent Simmonds in Wonderstruck
Jacob Tremblay in Wonder

Best Acting Ensemble
Dunkirk
Lady Bird
Mudbound
The Post
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Original Screenplay
Guillermo del Toro and Vanessa Taylor for The Shape of Water
Great Gerwig for Lady Bird
Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani for The Big Sick
Luz Hannah and Josh Singer for The Post
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Jordan Peele for Get Out

Best Adapted Screenplay
James Ivory for Call Me by Your Name
Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber for The Disaster Artist
Dee Rees and Virgil Williams for Mudbound
Aaron Sorkin for Molly's Game
Jack Thorne, Steve Conrad and Stephen Chbosky for Wonder

Best Cinematography
Roger Deakins for Blade Runner 2049
Hoyte van Hoytema for Dunkirk
Dan Laustsen for The Shape of Water
Rachel Morrison for Mudbound
Sayombhu Mukdeeprom for Call Me by Your Name

Best Production Design
Paul Denham Austerberry, Shane Vieau and Jeff Melvin for The Shape of Water
Jim Clay and Rebecca Alleway for Murder on the Orient Express
Natham Crowley and Gary Fettis for Dunkirk
Dennis Gassner and Alessandra Querzola for Blade Runner 2049
Sarah Greenwood and Katie Spender for Beauty and the Beast
Mark Tildesley and Veronique Melery for Phantom Thread

Best Editing
Michael Kahn and Sarah Broshar for The Post
Paul Machliss and Jonathan Amos for Baby Driver
Lee Smith for Dunkirk
Joe Walker for Blade Runner 2049
Sidney Wolinsky for The Shape of Water

Best Costume Design
Renee April for Blade Runner 2049
Mark Bridges for Phantom Thread
Jaqueline Durran for Beauty and the Beast
Lindy Hemming for Wonder Woman
Luis Sequeira for The Shape of Water

Best Hair and Makeup
Beauty and the Beast
Darkest Hour
I, Tonya
The Shape of Water
Wonder

Best Visual Effects
Blade Runner 2049
Dunkirk
The Shape of Water
Thor: Ragnarok
War for the Planet of the Apes
Wonder Woman

Best Song
Evermore in Beauty and the Beast
Mystery of Love in Call Me by Your Name
Remember Me in Coco
Stand Up in Something in Marshall
This is Me in The Greatest Showman

Best Score
Alexandre Desplat for The Shape of Water
Jonny Greenwood for Phantom Thread
Dario Marianelli for Darkest Hour
Benjamin Wallfisch and Hans Zimmer for Blade Runner 2049
John Williams for The Post
Hans Zimmer for Dunkirk

Best Action Movie
Baby Driver
Logan
Thor: Ragnarok
War for the Planet of the Apes
Wonder Woman

Best Comedy
The Big Sick
The Disaster Artist
Girls Trip
I, Tonya
Lady Bird

Best Actress in a Comedy
Tiffani Haddish in Girls Trip
Zoe Kazan in The Big Sick
Margot Robbie in I, Tonya
Saoirse Ronan in Lady Bird
Emma Stone in Battle of the Sexes

Best Actor in a Comedy
Steve Carell in Battle of the Sexes
James Frano in The Disaster Artist
Chris Hemsworth in Thor: Ragnarok
Kumall Nanjiani in The Big Sick
Adam Sandler in The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)

Best Sci-fi or Horror Movie
Blade Runner 2049
Get Out
It
The Shape of Water

Nominees by Picture

BABY DRIVER (2)
Best Editing – Paul Machliss, Jonathan Amos
Best Action Movie

BATTLE OF THE SEXES (2)
Best Actor in a Comedy – Steve Carell
Best Actress in a Comedy – Emma Stone

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (4)
Best Production Design – Sarah Greenwood, Katie Spencer
Best Costume Design – Jacqueline Durran
Best Hair and Makeup
Best Song – “Evermore”

THE BIG SICK (6)
Best Picture
Best Supporting Actress – Holly Hunter
Best Original Screenplay – Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani
Best Comedy
Best Actor in a Comedy – Kumail Nanjiani
Best Actress in a Comedy – Zoe Kazan

BLADE RUNNER 2049 (7)
Best Cinematography – Roger Deakins
Best Production Design – Dennis Gassner, Alessandra Querzola
Best Editing – Joe Walker
Best Costume Design – Renee April
Best Visual Effects
Best Sci-Fi or Horror Movie
Best Score – Benjamin Wallfisch and Hans Zimmer

BPM (BEATS PER MINUTE) (1)
Best Foreign Language Film

THE BREADWINNER (1)
Best Animated Feature

CALL ME BY YOUR NAME (8)
Best Picture
Best Actor – Timothée Chalamet
Best Supporting Actor – Armie Hammer
Best Supporting Actor – Michael Stuhlbarg
Best Director – Luca Guadagnino
Best Adapted Screenplay – James Ivory
Best Cinematography – Sayombhu Mukdeeprom
Best Song – “Mystery of Love”

COCO (2)
Best Animated Feature
Best Song – “Remember Me”

DARKEST HOUR (4)
Best Picture
Best Actor – Gary Oldman
Best Hair and Makeup
Best Score – Dario Marianelli

DESPICABLE ME 3 (1)
Best Animated Feature

THE DISASTER ARTIST (4)
Best Actor – James Franco
Best Adapted Screenplay – Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber
Best Comedy
Best Actor in a Comedy – James Franco

DOWNSIZING (1)
Best Supporting Actress – Hong Chau

DUNKIRK (8)
Best Picture
Best Acting Ensemble
Best Director – Christopher Nolan
Best Cinematography – Hoyte van Hoytema
Best Production Design – Nathan Crowley, Gary Fettis
Best Editing – Lee Smith
Best Visual Effects
Best Score – Hans Zimmer

A FANTASTIC WOMAN (1)
Best Foreign Language Film

FIRST THEY KILLED MY FATHER (1)
Best Foreign Language Film

THE FLORIDA PROJECT (3)
Best Picture
Best Supporting Actor – Willem Dafoe
Best Young Actor/Actress – Brooklynn Prince

GET OUT (5)
Best Picture
Best Actor – Daniel Kaluuya
Best Director – Jordan Peele
Best Original Screenplay – Jordan Peele
Best Sci-Fi or Horror Movie

GIFTED (1)
Best Young Actor/Actress – Mckenna Grace

GIRLS TRIP (3)
Best Supporting Actress – Tiffany Haddish
Best Comedy
Best Actress in a Comedy – Tiffany Haddish

THE GREATEST SHOWMAN (1)
Best Song – “This Is Me”

I, TONYA (5)
Best Actress – Margot Robbie
Best Supporting Actress – Allison Janney
Best Hair and Makeup
Best Comedy
Best Actress in a Comedy – Margot Robbie

IN THE FADE (1)
Best Foreign Language Film

IT (1)
Best Sci-Fi or Horror Movie

LADY BIRD (8)
Best Picture
Best Actress – Saoirse Ronan
Best Supporting Actress – Laurie Metcalf
Best Acting Ensemble
Best Director – Greta Gerwig
Best Original Screenplay – Greta Gerwig
Best Comedy
Best Actress in a Comedy – Saoirse Ronan

THE LEGO BATMAN MOVIE (1)
Best Animated Feature

LOGAN (3)
Best Supporting Actor – Patrick Stewart
Best Young Actor/Actress – Dafne Keen
Best Action Movie

LOVING VINCENT (1)
Best Animated Feature

MARSHALL (1)
Best Song – “Stand Up for Something”

THE MEYEROWITZ STORIES (NEW AND SELECTED) (1)
Best Actor in a Comedy – Adam Sandler

MOLLY’S GAME (2)
Best Actress – Jessica Chastain
Best Adapted Screenplay – Aaron Sorkin

MUDBOUND (4)
Best Supporting Actress – Mary J. Blige
Best Acting Ensemble
Best Adapted Screenplay – Dee Rees and Virgil Williams
Best Cinematography – Rachel Morrison

MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS (1)
Best Production Design – Jim Clay, Rebecca Alleway

PHANTOM THREAD (4)
Best Actor – Daniel Day-Lewis
Best Production Design – Mark Tildesley, Veronique Melery
Best Costume Design – Mark Bridges
Best Score – Jonny Greenwood

THE POST (8)
Best Picture
Best Actor – Tom Hanks
Best Actress – Meryl Streep
Best Acting Ensemble
Best Director – Steven Spielberg
Best Original Screenplay – Liz Hannah and Josh Singer
Best Editing – Michael Kahn, Sarah Broshar
Best Score – John Williams

THE SHAPE OF WATER (14)
Best Picture
Best Actress – Sally Hawkins
Best Supporting Actor – Richard Jenkins
Best Supporting Actress – Octavia Spencer
Best Director – Guillermo del Toro
Best Original Screenplay – Guillermo del Toro and Vanessa Taylor
Best Cinematography – Dan Laustsen
Best Production Design – Paul Denham Austerberry, Shane Vieau, Jeff Melvin
Best Editing – Sidney Wolinsky
Best Costume Design – Luis Sequeira
Best Hair and Makeup
Best Visual Effects
Best Sci-Fi or Horror Movie
Best Score – Alexandre Desplat

THE SQUARE (1)
Best Foreign Language Film

STRONGER (1)
Best Actor – Jake Gyllenhaal

THELMA (1)
Best Foreign Language Film

THOR: RAGNAROK (3)
Best Visual Effects
Best Action Movie
Best Actor in a Comedy – Chris Hemsworth

THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI (6)
Best Picture
Best Actress – Frances McDormand
Best Supporting Actor – Sam Rockwell
Best Acting Ensemble
Best Director – Martin McDonagh
Best Original Screenplay – Martin McDonagh

WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES (2)
Best Visual Effects
Best Action Movie

WONDER (3)
Best Young Actor/Actress – Jacob Tremblay
Best Adapted Screenplay – Jack Thorne, Steve Conrad, Stephen Chbosky
Best Hair and Makeup

WONDER WOMAN (3)
Best Costume Design – Lindy Hemming
Best Visual Effects
Best Action Movie

WONDERSTRUCK (1)
Best Young Actor/Actress – Millicent Simmonds

#Oscars2018 Documentary Shorts Shortlist

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Recently AMPAS announced that the field of Documentary Short Subject contenders for the 90th edition has been narrowed to 10 films, of which five (5) will earn a nomination.

Voters from the Academy’s Documentary Branch viewed this year’s 77 eligible entries and submitted their ballots to PricewaterhouseCoopers for tabulation.

Nominations for the 90th Academy Awards will be announced on Tuesday, January 23, 2018.

The 10 films are listed below in alphabetical order by title

Alone, Garret Bradley, USA
Edith+Eddie,  Laura Checkoway, USA
Heaven Is a Traffic Jam on the 405, Frank Stiefel, USA
Heroin(e), Elaine McMillion Sheldon, USA
Kayayo – The Living Shopping Baskets, Mari Bakke Riise, Norway
Knife Skills, Thomas Lennon, USA
116 Cameras, Davina Pardo,  USA and UK
Ram Dass, Going Home, Derek Peck, USA
Hopptornet (Ten Meter Tower), Axel Danielson and Maximilien van Aertryck, Sweden
Traffic Stop, Gina Kamentsky and Julie Zammarchi, USA

The 90th Academy Awards will be held on Sunday, March 4, 2018, at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT.

Alone by Garret Bradley
What would it mean to marry someone behind bars?



Edith+Eddie by Laura Checkoway
Edith and Eddie, ages 96 and 95, are America's oldest interracial newlyweds. Their love story is disrupted by a family feud that threatens to tear the couple apart.



Heaven Is a Traffic Jam on the 405 by Frank Stiefel
Mindy Alper is a tortured and brilliant 56 year old artist who is represented by one of Los Angeles' top galleries. Acute anxiety, mental disorder and devastating depression have caused her to be committed to mental institutions undergo electro shock therapy and survive a 10 year period without the ability to speak. Her hyper self awareness has allowed her to produce a lifelong body of work that expresses her emotional state with powerful psychological precision. Through interviews, reenactments, the building of an eight and a half foot papier-mache' bust of her beloved psychiatrist, and examining drawings made from the time she was a child, we learn how she has emerged from darkness and isolation to a life that includes love, trust and support.



Heroin(e) by Elaine McMillion Sheldon
Three women fight to break the cycle one life at a time.



Kayayo, the Living Shopping Baskets by Mari Bakke Riise
In the capital of Ghana, 10,000 girls from the ages of 6 work as real life shopping baskets - called Kayayo, carrying heavy loads on their head (from 130 to 220 pounds), earning very little and some end up in prostitution to make ends meet. This documentary is about Bamunu, an 8-year old girl who hasn’t seen her family since she was sent away from home two years ago to work as a Kayayo to support her family. We follow her incessant longing to get away from the harsh markets, her journey back home and what awaits there.



Knife Skills by Thomas Lennon
What does it take to build a world-class French restaurant? What if the staff is almost entirely men and women just out of prison? What if most have never cooked or served before, and have barely two months to learn their trade? We follow the hectic launch of Edwins restaurant in Cleveland. In this improbable setting, with its mouth-watering dishes and its arcane French vocabulary, we discover the challenges of men and women finding their way after their release. We come to know three trainees intimately, as well as the restaurant's founder, who is himself haunted by his time in jail. These men and women all have something to prove, and all struggle to launch new lives, an endeavor as pressured and perilous as the ambitious restaurant launch of which they are a part.



116 Cameras by Davina Pardo
Holocaust survivor Eva Schloss preserves her story interactively so that she will be able to tell it forever.



Ram Dass, Going Home by Derek Peck
A profound and poetic encounter with cultural and spiritual icon Ram Dass, at his home on Maui toward the end of his life.



Hopptornet (Ten Meter Tower) by Axel Danielson and Maximilien van Aertryck
On a 10-meter high diving tower, fear of taking the jump is pitted against the personal loss that would arise if you didn't dare. What do we look like when we hesitate and when we make a decision? What does it look like when we overcome our fear?



Traffic Stop by Gina Kamentsky and Julie Zammarchi
Alex Landau, an African American man, was raised by his adoptive white parents to believe that skin color didn't matter. But when Alex was pulled over by Denver police officers one night in 2009, he lost his belief in a color-blind world — and nearly lost his life. Alex tells his mother, Patsy Hathaway, what happened that night and how it affects him to this day.


#Oscars2018 Documentary Features Shortlist

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The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences today announced that 15 films in the Documentary Feature category will advance in the voting process for the 90th Academy Awards. One hundred seventy films were originally submitted in the category.

This is perhaps the most predictable main category for this Academy Awards edition as bet that top award will go to any of these documentaries:  Faces Places, Ex Libris or Last Men in Aleppo.

As a matter of fact my crystal ball says those three will have nominations plus the fourth spot will go to Jane and the fifth perhaps go to Ai Weiwei film or let's say it's still open for me to decide later.

My winner and top hopeful to win 2018 Oscar obviously is Faces Places as doc is a fantastic visual voyage, the photos are superb and the whole experiential idea just blows my mind (thanks to how is presented in documentary).  Then, wish Agnes Varda gets a competitive Oscar so she can place it besides her honorary Oscar, sigh.

The 15 films are listed below in alphabetical order by title in English.

Abacus: Small Enough to Jail, Steve James, USA
Chasing Coral, Jeff Orlowski, USA
City of Ghosts, Matthew Heineman, USA
Ex Libris – The New York Public Library, Frederick Wiseman, USA
Visages, Villages (Faces Places), JR and Agnes Varda, France
Human Flow, Ai Weiwei, Germany
Icarus, Bryan Fogel, USA
An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power, Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk, USA
Jane, Brett Morgen, USA
LA 92, Daniel Lindsay and T.J. Martin, USA
Last Men in Aleppo, Firas Fayyad, Steen Johannessen and Hasan Kattan, Denmark and Syria
Long Strange Trip, Amir Bar-Lev,  USA
One of Us, Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, USA
Strong Island, Yance Ford, USA
Unrest, Jennifer Brea, USA and UK

The Academy’s Documentary Branch determined the shortlist in a preliminary round of voting. Documentary Branch members will now select the five nominees from among the 15 titles.

Nominations for the 90th Academy Awards will be announced on Tuesday, January 23, 2018.

The 90th Oscars will be held on Sunday, March 4, 2018, at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT.

#Oscars2018 VFX Shortlist

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The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced a few days back that 20 films are in the running in the Visual Effects category for the 90th Academy Awards.

Believe 20 films in a shortlist are too-many and understand why many of those films are in list, because visual effects are great -even when many of those films are not that good (lol)- and some go to the outstanding side of the scale.

There are a couple of films I haven't seen yet but according to general buzz believe will find a spot among the nominees:  Denis Villeneuve's Blade Runner 2049 and Guillermo del Toro's The Shape of Water.  Still, you never know in this category as there are too-many super heroes films with spectacular effects, many blockbusters, some flops and then too-few-great films.  Always will hope for great movies to be nominated and to win, but with this not-too-short-shortlist my only hope for a nod is for great Wonder Woman (lol!).

The films are listed below in alphabetical order

Alien: Covenant
Beauty and the Beast
Blade Runner 2049
Dunkirk
Ghost in the Shell
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle
Justice League
Kong: Skull Island
Life
Logan
Okja
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales
The Shape of Water
Spider-Man Homecoming
Star Wars: The Last Jedi
Thor: Ragnarok
Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets
War for the Planet of the Apes
Wonder Woman

The Academy’s Visual Effects Branch Executive Committee determined the preliminary shortlist. Later this month, the committee will select the 10 films that will advance to nominations voting.

Nominations for the 90th Academy Awards will be announced on Tuesday, January 23, 2018.

#Oscars2018 Animated Shorts Shortlist

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The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences recently announced that 10 animated short films will advance in the voting process for the 90th Academy Awards. Sixty-three (63) pictures had originally qualified in the category.

Members of the Short Films and Feature Animation Branch viewed all the eligible entries for the preliminary round of voting.

Short Films and Feature Animation Branch members will now select five nominees from among the 10 titles on the shortlist.

Branch screenings will be held in Los Angeles, London, New York and San Francisco in January.

Nominations for the 90th Academy Awards will be announced on Tuesday, January 23, 2018.

There are some outstanding stories among these shortlisted films, most remarkable is Life Smartphone with story that everyone in the world should see as they surely will identify themselves in any of the situation pictured.  But know this category honors animation plus story, direction and other tech specs and perhaps Chenglin Xie doesn't have the most impact-full animation or design but I find is exactly the type of animation the story needs.  Outstanding short!!! Yes, this is my winner!!!

The 10 films are listed below in alphabetical order by title in English.

Cradle, Devon Manney, USA
Dear Basketball, Glen Keane, USA
Fox and the Whale, Robin Joseph, Canada
Garden Party, Victor Caire and Gabriel Grapperon, Florian Babikian, Vincent Bayoux, Theophile Dufresne and Lucas Navarro, France
In a Heartbeat, Esteban Bravo and Beth David, USA
Life Smartphone, Chenglin Xie, China
Lost Property Office, Daniel Agdag, Australia
Lou, Dave Mullins, USA
Negative Space, Max Porter and Ru Kuwahata, France
Revolting Rhymes, Jakob Schuh and Jan Lachauer, UK

Cradle by Devon Manney
Returning to the USA after losing both arms overseas, a young veteran battles phantom pains, prosthetics, and memories of his pre-war life while reaching for a sense of normalcy.



Dear Basketball by Glen Keane
On November 29, 2015 Kobe Bryant penned a letter in the Players' Tribune announcing his retirement from basketball at the end of that season. This film is the visualization of that letter, narrated by Kobe, scored by John Williams and animated by Glen Keane.



Fox and the Whale by Robin Joseph
The tale of a curious fox who goes in search of an elusive whale. A journey of pursuit and longing.



Garden Party by Victor Caire and Gabriel Grapperon, Florian Babikian, Vincent Bayoux, Theophile Dufresne and Lucas Navarro
In a deserted rich house, a couple of amphibians explore their surroundings and follow their primal instincts.



In a Heartbeat by Esteban Bravo and Beth David
A shy, middle school boy who struggles coming to terms with being gay, Sherwin, and the most popular boy in school, Jonathan. When their paths cross one day, Sherwin's heart pop's out of his chest to chase after the boy of his dreams. Now, Sherwin must chase after his own heart before it reveals his feelings towards Jonathan, and humiliating him in front of the entire school.



Life Smartphone by Chenglin Xie
The phenomenon of increasing smartphone addiction can be attributed to today's cutting-edge technology. Staring at glowing screens instead of exploring the vast expanse of life, people are gradually alienating themselves from the richness, depth, and loveliness of life.



Lost Property Office by Daniel Agdag
Sometimes people can get lost in their work.



Lou by Dave Mullins
A Pixar short about a lost-and-found box and the unseen monster within.



Negative Space by Max Porter and Ru Kuwahata
My dad taught me how to pack.



Revolting Rhymes (Part Two) by Jan Lachauer, Jakob Schuh and Bin-Han To
The second of two animations based on the much-loved rhymes written by Roald Dahl and illustrated by Quentin Blake.
Jack grows up with his heart set on next-door neighbor Cindy. She has her eye turned by the eligible prince at the ball, and Jack gets distracted by a giant beanstalk at the bottom of his garden. Will they find true love?


74th Venice International Film Festival Lineup

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Today, August 7, 2017 organizers announce three (3) more films in the selection, one is out of competition, another is a special screening and the last one is a documentary in Venezia Classici section.

The two films are by well-known directors, first is the much-awaited return of John Woo to the crime thriller which made him famous and second, outstanding filmmaker Andrea Segre latest opus which hope has his peculiar storytelling style even when story is about immigration to Europe.

Just noticed la Biennale di Venezia changed its website, so have to find where is everything as not being able to find where is the Special Screenings or maybe the movie announced today is the only one (probably not).  While learn about the site will write the Andrea Segre film data in the following paragraph.

Special Screening: L'ordine delle Cose, Andrea Segre, Italy

To check the news at official site go here

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1/27/17
The complete line-up of the 2017 Biennale was announced during a press conference that took place on Thursday, July 27th in Rome.  The conference was streamed live and to my delight was able to watch the end with the live announcement of the 21 films in the main competition.

Believe must of us were expecting a very strong lineup as already knew the films that didn't make it to the other two main competitive festivals and well, the lineup is great but is not as strong as I was hoping for.  Still will not deny that I'm very pleased to find in the competition the latest films by Aronofsky and Kechiche.  Talking about Kechiche, his film is the first installment in a diptych -that could become triptych- based on Francois Bégaudeau’s book La blessure, la vraie, a saga centering around a screenwriter who returns to his hometown.

Another film that could be interesting is the debut film by Xavier Legrand as he's the director of the 2013 short film that went on to collect an Oscar nomination.  I loved Lebanon and now Samuel Maoz is in competition with Foxtrot which becomes must-be-seen for me.

Most unexpected is to find Lucrecia Martel's Zuma and Anne Fontaine's Marvin not in competition but relegated to Out of Competition the first and the Orizzonti section -the second-.  Really wonder how some American movies in competition could be "better" than films by Martel or Fontaine; so, there was room in the competition, just take 2 films and voila! two extraordinary female filmmakers would have been in the competition that -by the way- has only one female director.  Sigh.

On the not-so-good side, there are too many American films for my taste but know the festival is trying to be the harbinger to the Oscars and seems that last year its effort were successful as not only the festival opening film "almost" won the top Oscar (LOL) but also there were other films with nominations.

No doubt that the best news for many non-cinephiles is Jennifer Lawrence attending the festival, which obviously will give fest lots and lots of social media buzz and press coverage. Yes, I'm please with her doing all the crazy antics she does.

The festival will run from August 30 to September 9 and will update post with additions as soon as they're announced, if applicable.  Was waiting for the official press release but seems this year organizers will take their time releasing more data about the festival.  As of this moment, Saturday,  July 29th, the post is updated with all films in all sections, including the ones that have been added yesterday; so, maybe, no more updates will come, but will be checking constantly.

There are twenty-one (21) films in the competition, seven (7) are USA productions or co productions which makes it the leading country, followed by  France with 6, Italy 5, UK and Germany with 2 each, Australia, Japan, Switzerland, Lebanon and Israel with 1 each.

Have finished reading/learning about each of the 21 films in competition and from the ones I knew nothing, the biggest surprise undoubtedly is Guillermo del Toro's movie as from trailer seems will be quite entertaining while being dramatic, yes, has become must-be-seen for me.  From the little info available for some films is not easy to guess if any will qualify for the Queer Lion, which is unusual as always there is something in synopsis that gives it away.   Maybe Queer Lion contenders will come from other sections but soon enough we will learn the lineup.

Venezia 74 Competition
International competition of feature films, presented as world premieres

Opening Film:Downsizing, Alexander Payne, USA
Ammore e Malavita, Manetti Brothers, Italy
Ex Libris.  The New York Public Library, Frederick Wiseman, USA (documentary)
First Reformed, Paul Schrader, USA
Foxtrot, Samuel Maoz, Israel, Germany, France and Switzerland
Hannah, Andrea Pallaoro, Italy, Belgium and France
Human Flow, Ai Weiwei, Germany and USA (documentary)
嘉年華 Jia nian hua (Angels Wear White), Vivian Qu, China and France
Jusqu'à la garde, Xavier Legrand, France
La Villa (The House by the Sea), Robert Guédiguian, France
L'Insulte (The Insult), Ziad Doueiri, France and Lebanon
Lean on Pete, Andrew Haigh, UK
Mektoub, My Love: Canto Uno, Abdellatif Kechiche, France and Italy
mother!, Daren Aronofsky, USA
三度目の殺人 Sandome no Satsujin (The Third Murder), Koreeda Hirokazu, Japan
Suburbicon, George Clooney, USA
Sweet Country, Warwick Thornton, Australia
The Leisure Seeker, Paolo Virzì, Italy
The Shape of Water, Guillermo del Toro, USA
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, Martin McDonagh, UK
Una Famiglia, Sebastiano Riso, Italy

Jury
President: Annette Bening, actress, USA
Ildikó Enyedi, director and screenwriter, Hungary
Michel Franco, director, producer and screenwriter, Mexico
Rebecca Hall, actress, UK
Anna Mouglalis, actress, France
David Stratton, film critic, UK and Australia
Jasmine Trinca, actress, Italy
Edgar Wright, director and screenwriter, UK
Yonfan, director, producer and screenwriter



Out of Competition
Important works by directors already established in previous editions of the Festival

Feature Films
アウトレイジ 最終章 Autoreiji Saishusho (Outrage Coda), Takeshi Kitano, Japan
Brawl in Cell Block 99, S. Craig Zahler, USA
Il Colore Nascosto delle Cose, Silvio Soldini, Italy and Switzerland
La mélodie, Rachid Hami, France
Le Fidèle (Racer and the Jailbird), Michaël R. Roskam, Belgium, France and Netherlands
Loving Pablo, Fernando León de Aranoa, Spain and Bulgaria
Our Souls at Night, Ritesh Batra, USA
The Private Life of a Modern Woman, James Toback, USA
Victoria & Abdul, Stephen Frears, UK
Zama, Lucercia Martel, Argentina and Brazil
追捕 Zhuibu (Manhunt), John Woo, China and Hong Kong

Documentaries
Cuba and the Cameraman, Jon Alpert, USA
Diva!, Francesco Patierno, Italy 
Happy Winter, Giovanni Totaro, Italy
Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond. The Story of Jim Carrey, Andy Kaufman and Tony Clifton, Chris Smith, USA and Canada
My Generation, David Batty, UK
Piazza Vittorio, Abel Ferrara, Italy
Ryuichi Sakamoto: Coda, Stephen Nomura Schible, USA
The Devil and Father Amorth, William Friedkin, USA 
This is Congo, Daniel McCabe, Congo

TV Series
Wormwood, Errol Morris, USA (6 episodes)

Special Events
Casa d'Altri, Gianni Amelio, Italy, 16'
Il Signor Rotpeter, Antonietta de Lillo, Italy, 37'
Making of Michael Jackson's Thriller, Jerry Kramer, USA, 45'
Michael Jackson's Thriller 3D, John Landis, USA, 14'



Orizzonti
A competition dedicated to films that represent the latest aesthetic and expressive trends in international cinema.

Feature Films
بدون تاریخ بدون امضاء Bedoune Tarikh, Bedoune Emza (No Date, No Signature), Vahid Jalilvand, Iran
Brutti e Cattivi (Ugly Nasty People), Cosimo Gomez, Italy and France
Caniba, Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Verena Paravel, France
Espèces menacées, Gilles Bourdos, France and Belgium
Gatta Cenerentola, Alessandro Rak, Ivan Cappiello, Marion Guarnieri and Dario Sansone,  Italy (animation)
Ha Ben Dod (The Cousin), Tzahi Grad, Israel
Ha'Edut (The Testament), Amichai Greenberg, Israel and Austria
Invisible, Pablo Giorgelli, Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Germany
Krieg, Rick Ostermann, Germany
La Nuit ou J'ai Nage (The Night I Swam), Damien Manivel and Igarashi Kohei, France and Japan'
La Vita in Comune, Edoardo Winspeare, Italy
Les Bienheureux, Sofia Djama, France and Belgium
Los Versos del Olvido, Alireza Khatami, France, Germany, Netherlands and Chile
Marvin, Anne Fontaine, France
الإختفاء Napadid Shodan (Disappearance), Ali Asgari, Iran and Qatar
Nico, 1988, Susanna Nicchiarelli, Italy and Belgium
The Rape of Recy Taylor, Nancy Buirski, USA
Undir trénu(Under the Tree), Hafsteinn Gunnar Sigurðsson, Iceland, Denmark, Poland and Germany
West of Sunshine, Jason Raftopoulos, Australia

Short Films
8th Continent, Pavlos Iordanopoulos, Greece, 11'
Apia, Myrsini Aristidou, Cyprus and France, 13'
Astrometal, Efthimis Kosemund Sanidis, Greece, 15'
Awasarn Sound Man (Death of the Sound Man), Sorayos Prapapan, Thailand and Myanmar, 16'
By The Pool, Laurynas Bareiša, Lithuania, 16'
Gros Chagrin, Céline Devaux, France, 15' (animation)
Himinn Opinn, Gabriel Sanson and Clyde Gates, Belgium, 19'
Lagi Senang Jaga Sekandang Lembu (It's Easier to Raise Cattle), Amanda Nell Eu, Malaysia, 18'
L'Ombra della Sposa, Alessandra Pescetta, Italy, 11'
Meninas Formicida, João Paulo Miranda Maria, France and Brasil, 12'
Mon Amour, Mon Ami, Adriano Valerio, Italy, 15'
The Knife Salesman, Michael Leonard and Jamie Helmer, Australia, 10' 
Tierra Mojada, Juan Sebastián Mesa Bedoya, Colombia, 17'

Out of Competition Short Films
Futuro Prossimo, Salvatore Mereu, Italy, 18'

Jury
President: Gianni Amelio, director, Italy
Rakhshan Banietemad, director, Iran
Ami Canaan Mann, director, USA
Mark Cousins, director, screenwriter and curator, Ireland
Andrés Duprat, screenwriter and artistic curator, Argentina
Fien Troch, director and screenwriter, Belgium
Rebecca Zlotowski, director and screenwriter, France

Luigi De Laurentis for a Debut Film - Lion of the Future Jury
President: Benoît Jacquot, director and screenwriter, France
Geoff Andrew, author and film programmer, UK
Albert Lee, producer, Hong Kong
Greta Scarano, actress, Italy
Yorgos Zois, director, Greece

Venice Virtual Reality
Competitive section of VR films, with a section of out-of-competition VR films

Alice, The Virtual Reality Play, Mathias Chelebourg, France, 20'
Arden's Wake Expanded, Eugene Yk Chung, USA, 16'
Chuang (In The Pictures), Qing Shao, China, 5' (animation)
Dispatch, Edward Robles, USA and UK, 6'
Dongducheon (Bloodless), Gina Kim, South Korea and USA, 12'
Draw Me Close, Jordan Tannahill, Canada and UK, 15'
Free Whale, Zhang Peibin, China, 7' (animation)
Gomorra VR. We Own the Streets, Enrico Rosati, Italia, 14'
Greenland Melting, Nonny de la Peña, USA, 11'
Hver Sin Stilhed (Separate Silences), Denmark, 17'
I Saw The Future, François Vautier, France, 5'
Jia Zai Lanre Si (The Deserted), Tsai Ming-Liang, Taiwan, 55'
La Camera Insabbiata, Laurie Anderson and Huang Hsin-Chien, USA, 20' (animation)
Melita, Nicolás Alcalá, USA, 24'
My Name is Peter Stillman, Lysander Ashton and Leo Warner, UK, 6' (animation)
Nefertiti, Richard Mills and Kim-Leigh Pontin, UK, 15' (animation)
Nothing Happens, Uri Kranot and Michelle Kranot, Denmark and France, 14' (animation)
Proxima, Mathieu Pradat, France, 9'
Shi Meng Lao Ren (The Dream Collector), Mi Li, China, 11' (animation)
Snatch VR Heist Experience, Rafael Pavón and Nicolás Alcalá, USA, 5'
The Argos File, Josema Roig, USA, 4'
The Last Goodbye, Gabo Adora, USA, 20'

Out of Competition
Alteration, Jérôme Blanquet, France, 16'
Chromatica, Flavio Costa, Italy, 17'
Dear Angelica, Saschka Unseld, USA, 13' (animation)
Denoise (Beautiful Things), Giorgio Ferrero, Italy, 12'
Mule, Guy Shemerdine, USA, 6'
Miyubi, Félix Lajeunesse and Paul Raphaël, Canada, 40'
Naive New Beaters "Heal Tomorrow", Romain Chassaing, UK, 4'
On/Off, Camille Duvelleroy and Isabelle Foucrier, France, 10'
Sens. Part 1, Charles Ayats and Marc-Antoine Mathieu, France, 16'

Jury
John Landis, director, USA
Céline Sciamma, director and screenwriter, France
Ricky Tognazzi, director and actor, Italy

Venezia Classici
A selection of restored classic films and documentaries on cinema.  Outstanding selection with films by Antonioni, Bertolucci, Chabrol, Godard, Forman, Ozu, Mizoguchi and many more.  Check films at official site here.

Jury of Cinema History Students
Chair: Giuseppe Piccioni, director, Italy

Cinema nel Giardino
Films, talks and visions with interesting films and one TV series from Italy.  Check all films here.

Videos






20th British Independent Film Awards Winners

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Last night was the awards ceremony with Lady Macbeth wining five awards including Best Actress for Florence Pugh, God's Own Country follows with four awards including Best British Film, The Death of Stalin also with four awards and most interesting, I Am Not a Witch wins 3 awards but remarkable is that film director, Rungano Nyoni wins Best Director and Best Debut Director, an achievement that happens not often, last time was in 2007 with Anton Corbijn for Control.

Thanks to BIFA's 2017 nominations became interested in watching Lady Macbeth, a film that I had decided will skip.  I'm grateful to BIFA as was going to skip one of the most outstanding films from 2017, a film with great performances, great tech specs, but, most of all, a great director that could transform a well-known tale into storytelling anew. The end-result is a mesmerizing film, impossible to take off your eyes from the screen from the very first frame until the last one.  All honors here are well-deserved and know film will collect more in the current awards season.

As film is doing so-well with American critics, it's worth noting that Get Out got the BIFA for Best International Independent Film which could mean a place in the BAFTA's.

Gary Oldman was on hand at the ceremony to collect the Variety Award from Kristin Scott Thomas; the award recognizes the global impact he has made throughout his career as an icon of British film and filmmaking.

Vanessa Redgrave received The Richard Harris Award in recognition of her outstanding work within the British film industry. Jared Harris, son of Richard Harris, commented: “Vanessa is one of the finest actresses of her generation, and indeed any generation, and we’re thrilled that she’s receiving this award. This is especially meaningful as Vanessa was Guinevere to Richard’s King Arthur”.

Winners are in *BLUE. To check winners at official site go here.

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11/3/17
Yesterday Maisie Williams and Hayle Squires announced the nominations for the milestone 20th anniversary of an event that celebrates independent cinema.  There are some films that  could be interesting to watch but the biggest surprise is to find among the nominees a film that has strong Oscar buzz, which means film could do well in British and American awards circuit/season; we'll soon see if BAFTA also honors film with nominations.  Yes, I'm talking about Three Billboards ...

In total there are 35 British feature films nominated. Lady Macbeth leads with fifteen (15) nominations followed by The Death of Stalin and I Am Not a Witch with 13 noms plus God's Own Country and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri with 11 nominations.

Debut features dominate the nominations list, with the first-time writers, producers and directors of Lady Macbeth, I Am Not a Witch and God’s Own Country all recognized in the three newcomer categories – Debut Screenwriter, Breakthrough Producer and The Douglas Hickox Award for Best Debut Director – as well as Best Screenplay, Best Director and Best British Independent Film.

BIFA said, “This year’s nominations showcase the range and quality of British independent filmmaking. It’s a diverse and varied list, in terms of the teams making the films and also the kinds of stories being told. It is especially encouraging to see so much exciting work from so many new filmmakers; this points to a very bright future for British cinema and we’re proud to be at the heart of it, celebrating these exceptional films.”

The Nominations

Best British Independent Film
*God's Own Country
I'm Not a Witch
Lady Macbeth
The Death of Stalin
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

The Discovery Award
Even When I Fall
Halfway
*In Another Life
Isolani
My Pure Land

Best Documentary
*Almost Heaven
Half Way
Kingdom of Us
Uncle Howard
Williams

Best International Independent Film
The Florida Project, Sean Baker
*Get Out, Jordan Peele
I Am Not Your Negro, Raoul Peck
Loveless, Andrei Zvyagintsev
The Square, Ruben Ostlund

Best Director
Armando Iannucci for The Death of Stalin
Francis Lee for God's Own Country
*Riungano Nyoni for I Am Not a Witch
William Oldroyd for Lady Macbeth
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

The Douglas HIckox Award - Debut Director
Francis Lee for God's Own Country
*Rungano Nyoni for I Am Not a Witch
Thomas Napper for Jawbone
William Oldroyd for Lady Macbeth
Deborah Haywood for Pin Cushion

Best Cinematography
David Gallego for I Am Not a Witch
Tat Radcliffe for Jawbone
*Ari Wegner for Lady Macbeth
Thomas Riedelsheimer for Leaning Into the Wind
Ben Davis for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Screenplay
Armando Iannucci, David Schneider and Ian Martin for The Death of Stalin
Francis Lee for God's Own Country
Rungano Nyoni for I Am Not a Witch
*Alice Birch for Lady Macbeth
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Debut Screenwriter
*Francis Lee for God's Own Country
Rungano Nyoni for I Am Not a Witch
Johnny Harris for Jawbone
Alice Birch for Lady Macbeth
Gaby Chiappe for Their Finest

Best Actress
Emily Beecham in Daphne
Ruth Wilson in Dark River
Margaret Mulubwa in I Am Not a Witch
*Florence Pugh in Lady Macbeth
Frances McDormand in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Supporting Actress
Andrea Riseborough in The Death of Stalin
Julie Walters in Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
Kelly Macdonald in Goodbye Christopher Robin
Naomi Ackie in Lady Macbeth
*Patricia Clarkson in The Party

Best Actor
Jamie Bell in Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
*Josh O'Connor in God's Own Country
Alec Secareanu in God's Own Country
Johnny Harris in Jawbone
Paddy Considine in Journeyman

Best Supporting Actor
Steve Buscemi in The Death of Stalin
*Simon Russell Beale in The Death of Stalin
Ian Hart in God's Own Country
Woody Harrelson in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Sam Rockwell in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Most Promising Newcomer
Harry Michell in Chubby Funny
Harry Gilby in Just Charlie
Cosmo Jarvis in Lady Macbeth
*Naomi Ackie in Lady Macbeth
Lily Newmark in Pin Cushion

Best Casting
*Sarah Crowe for The Death of Stalin
Debbie McWilliams for Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
Shaheen Baig and Layla Merrick-Wolf for God's Own Country
Shaheen Baig for Lady Macbeth
Sarah Halley Finn for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Costume Design
Suzie Harman for The Death of Stalin
Sandy Powell for How To Talk to Girls at Parties
Holly Rebecca for I Am Not a Witch
*Holly Waddington for Lady Macbeth
Dinah Collin for My Cousin Rachel

Best Editing
Peter Lambert for The Death of Stalin
David Charap for Jawbone
*Jon Gregory for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Joe Martin for Us and Them
Johnny Burke for Williams

Best Make-Up and Hair Design
Jan Sewell for Breathe
*Nicole Stafford for The Death of Stalin
Julene Paton for I Am Not a Witch
Nadia Stacey for Journeyman
Sian Wilson for Lady Macbeth

Best Music
Christopher Willis for The Death of Stalin
Matt Kelly for I Am Not a Witch
Paul Weller for Jawbone
Fred Frith for Leaning Into the Wind
*Carter Burwell for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Production Design
*Cristina Casali for The Death of Stalin
Eve Stewart for Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool
James Merifield for Final Portrait
Nathan Parker for I Am Not a Witch
Jacqueline Abrahams for Lady Macbeth

Best Sound
Breathe
*Anna Bertmark for God's Own Country
Maiken Hansen for I Am Not a Witch
Andy Shelley and Steve Griffiths for Jawbone
Joakim Sundstrom for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Effects
The Death of Stalin
Dan Martin for Double Date
Luke Dodd for Journeyman
*Nick Allder and Ben White for The Ritual
Chris Reynolds for Their Finest

Breakthrough Producer
Brendan Mullin and Katy Jackson for Bad Day for the Cut
Jack Tarling and Manon Ardisson for God's Own Country
*Emily Morgan for I Am Not a Witch
Fodhla Cronin O'Reilly for Lady Macbeth
Gavin Humphries for Pin Cushion

Best British Short
1745
The Entertainer
*Fish Story
Work
Wren Boys

To check each film brief info at official site go here.

As previously announced, Gary Oldman will receive The Variety Award at the ceremony.The Variety Award recognizes a director, actor, writer or producer who has made a global impact and helped to focus the international spotlight on the UK.

Vanessa Redgrave is to receive The Richard Harris Award in recognition of the outstanding work within the British film industry.

Winners will be announced by host Mark Gatiss at the British Independent Film Awards Ceremony on Sunday 10 December at Old Billingsgate.

23rd Prix Lumières Nominations

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Early this morning the foreign press based in Paris announced the nominations for the 2018 edition of the Lumières Awards which honors French and Francophone films since 1995 when Daniel Toscan du Plantier and Edward Behr created the award.

Around 100 eligible films were screened in France during 2017 and 44 gained a nomination; now eighty (80) Lumières Academy members -representing 30+ countries- will vote to define the winner in each category.  Very-lucky Academy members have access to a videotheque created jointly with Cinando and Le Marche du Film de Cannes where all films became available to them; the platform received more than 500 visits during the pre-selection stage.

Surely not surprising to many, 120 battements par minute (BPM) leads with six nominations -and surely will dominate the Cèsars- followed by Barbara and (surprising many) Le sens de la fête with four noms each.

After writing all the nominations my conclusion is that this very-unusual-for-me year has separate me from one of my very passions, French cinema as here there are too-many films that haven't seen and more shameful, haven't heard about them. Sigh.  Yes 2017 came with a huge personal-life change, but that's no excuse to not watch the cinema I love the most.  Still, the great news is that there are some "new" films that have joined my viewing queue and hopefully will watch soon.

But then, me not hearing about so many films means they premiered outside the three main film festivals and consequently, I'm surprised that some films by extraordinary directors received no nominations, that's strange/unusual, isn't?  Perhaps the Cèsars nominations will more benevolent with those well-known directors and their films. (for example, where are Huppert, Trintignant, Claire Denis, etc.)

The nominations

Best Film
120 battements par minute (BPM), Robin Campillo
Au revoir là-haut (See You Up There), Albert Dupontel
Barbara, Mathieu Amalric
Félicité, Alain Gomis
Orpheline, Arnaud des Pallières
Le sens de la fête, Eric Toledano and Olivier Nakache

Best First Film
Les bienheureux (Blessed), Sofia Djama
En attendant les hirondelles (Until the Birds Return), Karim Moussaoui
Grave (Raw), Julia Ducournau
Jeune femme (Montparnasse Bienvenüe), Léonor Serraille
Patients (Step by Step), Grand Corps Malade and Mehdi Idir
Petit paysan (Bloody Milk), Hubert Charuel

Best Francophone Film
Avant la fin de l'été (Before Summer Ends), Maryam Goormaghtigh
La belle et la meute (Beauty and the Dogs), Kaouther Ben Hania
Noces (A Wedding), Stephan Streker
Paris pieds nus (Lost in Paris), Dominique Abel et Fiona Gordon
Une famille syrienne (Insyriated), Philippe Van Leeuw

Best Animated Film
Drôles de petites bêtes, Antoon Krings and Arnaud Bouron
Le grand méchant Renard et autres contes (Big Bad Fox), Benjamin Renner and Patrick Imbert
Zombillenium, Arthur de Pins and Alexis Ducord

Best Documentary
Carré 35, Eric Caravaca
Lumière! L'aventure commence, Thierry Frémaux
Makala, Emmanuel Gras
Sans adieu, Christophe Agou
Le vénérable W, (The Venerable W.), Barbet Schroeder
Visages Villages (Faces Places), Agnès Varda and JR

Best Director
Mathieu Amalric for Barbara
Robin Campillo for 120 battements par minute (BPM)
Laurent Cantet for L'Atelier (The Workshop)
Philippe Garrel for L'amant d'un jour (Love for a Day)
Alain Gomis for Félicité
Michel Hazanavicius for Le redoutable (Redoubtable)

Best Actress
Hiam Abbass in Une famille syrienne (Insyriated)
Jeanne Balibar in Barbara
Juliette Binoche in Un beau soleil intérieur (Bright Sunshine In)
Emmanuelle Devos in Numéro une (Number One)
Charlotte Gainsbourg in La promesse de l'aube (Promise at Dawn)
Karin Viard in Jalouse

Most Promising Actress
Iris Bry in Les Gardienes (The Guardians)
Laetitia Dosch in Jeune femme (Montparnasse Bienvenüe)
Eye Haidara in Le sens de la fête (C'est la vie!)
Camélia Jordana in Le brio
Pamela Ramos in Tous les rêves du monde (All the Dreams in the World)
Solène Rigot in Orpheline (Orphan)

Best Actor
Swann Arlaud in Petit paysan (Bloody Milk)
Daniel Auteuil in Le brio
Jean-Pierre Bacri in Le sens de la fête (C'est la vie!)
Louis Garrel in Le redoutable
Reda Kateb in Django
Nahuel Pérez Biscayart  in 120 battements par minute (BPM)

Most Promising Actor
Khaled Alouach in De toutes me forces (Do It Right)
Matthieu Lucci in L'Atelier (The Workshop)
Nekfeu in Tout nous sépare (All That Divides Us)
Finnegan Oldfield in Marvin ou La belle éducation (Reinventing Marvin)
Pablo Pauly in Patients (Step by Step)
Arnaud Valois in 120 battments par minute (BPM)

Best Screenplay
Christelle Berthevas and Arnaud des Pallières for Orpheline (Orphan)
Robin Campillo and Philippe Mangeot for 120 battements par minute (BPM)
Albert Dupontel and Pierre Lemaitare for Au revoir là-haut (See You Up There)
Karim Moussaoui and Maud Ameline for En attendant les hirondelles (Until the Birds Return)
Eric Toledano and Olivier Nakache for Le sens de la fête (C'est la vie!)

Best Cinematography
Christophe Beaucarne for Barbara
Céline Bozon for Félicité
Caroline Champetier for Les gardiennes (The Guardians)
Alain Duplantier for Le semeur (The Sower)
Irina Lubtchansky for Les fantômes d’Ismaël (Ismael's Ghosts)
Vincent Mathias for Au revoir là-haut (See You Up There)

Best Music
Gaspar Claus for Makala
Angelo Foley and Grand Corps Malade for Patients (Step by Step)
Grégoire Hetzelfor Les fantômes d'Ismaël (Ismael's Ghosts)
Igorrr for Jeannette, l’enfance de Jeanne d’Arc (Jeannette, the Childhood of Joan of Arc)
Arnaud Rebotini for 120 battements par minute (BPM)
Philippe Rombi for L'amant double (The Double Lover)

To check winners at the official site go here available only in French.  Been trying to find the date of the awards ceremony but no luck, most say will be in January 2018.  As soon as find date will add to Key Dates calendar.

This year the journalist group debut a new trophy designed by Joaquín Jiménez from La Monnaie de Paris.  The following is the designer statement.

Paris, ville lumière, et sa flamme, son phare.
Lumière dans le noir, la salle de cinéma

En gravure les lumières existent aussi, elles sont des ouvertures traversantes dans la matière,
elles permettent le passage. Le trophée représente donc une bande flamme dont l’âme, le foyer, la mèche, est la tour Eiffel.

Cette flamme est ajourée de «lumières», référence aux iconiques perforations des pellicules et aux fenêtres que sont les toiles decinéma que le regard traverse pour entrer dans la lumière d’une œuvre.

75th Annual Golden Globe Awards Nominations

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Yes, was able to watch the live streams with all the nominations as there was a first batch -where the most expected foreign film nominations were announced- and a second batch broadcasted along American TV morning shows, where major categories were announced.  Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA) president, Meher Tatna, introduced presenters Alfre Woodard, Garrett Hedlund, Kristen Bell and Sharon Stone who announced the nominations.

In general, there are some surprises but the biggest for me is finding that this group of journalists already watched the much-buzzed film All The Money in the World and they even gave a nomination to Christopher Plummer for a role he filmed in a rush (!!!) not long ago.  Sigh.  Well, let's hope film is as interesting as many are hoping, including me.  They also seem to be the only ones that have seen Denzel Washington movie, sigh.

Then there is that noise that's really bothering me as buzz went loud to say there were no female directors nominated.  Enough.  No director should be nominated because of their gender or to fill a quota.  Directors are and should be nominated for their work and any film related event should consider ONLY their work and stop trying to be politically correct.  Even Women Film Directors are commenting on this and this copy and paste of their tweet.

Women Film Directors‏ @women_direct
14h14 hours ago
Also re: #GoldenGlobes2018 snubs Patty Jenkins, Kathryn Bigelow, Sofia Coppola and Dee Rees aren't snubs. They're all talented women, but none except Rees had the critical support needed to get a directing nom and Rees was hampered by Netflix's inexpert campaigning.

Enough is enough. Stop this as will eventually create more damage than benefit female filmmakers and this goes especially to a new film critics group in Los Angeles that decided to split the Director category into Female and Male directors (????!!!!).  All the pressure makes people to do "stupid" things.  Sigh.

Not a flattery statement but somehow article reminds us that the Golden Globes are FUN (nominations are fun-to-read and show is fun-to-watch), this is an excerpt from a New York Times article that you could read here.  So my best suggestion is to have FUN with the GG and forget about how does or does not reflect/predict the Oscars or any other "more serious" awards season event or if they do whatever is necessary to assure BIG STARS will make it to the show or if films are not really comedy or musical or whatever else you are tempted to criticize.  Last, do not forget that this is a successful show as nominees attend the event and audiences from around the world watch the TV show.

Long seen as the most unserious stop on Hollywood’s awards circuit, the Golden Globes are handed out by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a group of mostly freelance journalists, only 89 of whom vote. Studios see members as easy to manipulate, a reputation the group contends is long outdated.

New this year is the name change from "Miss Golden Globes" to "Globes Ambassador" and the first one to inaugurate the renamed role is Dwayne Johnson daughter Simone Garcia Johnson. 

Well, let's go back to the nominations.  The Shape of Water by Guillermo del Toro leads the pack with seven (7) nominations followed closely by The Post and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri with six (6) each.  Lady Bird has four (4) and there are five films with three (3) nominations each: I, Tonya, The Greatest Showman,  All the Money in the World, Call Me by Your Name and Dunkirk.

The biggest surprise perhaps is (as noted by critic Guy Lodge on Twitter) The Greatest Showman scored more nominations than (awards season favorite) Get Out.  We know Hugh Jackman is more TV show friendly that lesser known actors, so then perhaps is no surprise (lol!).

Seth Meyers will host the 2018 awards ceremony from the International Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton on January 7th; show will be broadcast live at 8:pm ET/ 5:00pm PT on NBC.

Motion Picture Nominees

Best Motion Picture - Drama
Call Me by Your Name
Dunkirk
The Post
The Shape of Water
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical
The Disaster Artist
Get Out
The Greatest Showman
I, Tonya
Lady Bird

Best Animated Feature Film
The Boss Baby
The Breadwinner
Coco
Ferdinand
Loving Vincent

Best Foreign Language Film
A Fantastic Woman
First They Killed My Father
In The Fade
Loveless
The Square

Best Director
Guillermo del Toro for The Shape of Water
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Christopher Nolan for Dunkirk
Ridley Scott for All the Money in the World
Steven Spielberg for The Post

Best Actress - Drama
Jessica Chastain in Molly's Game
Sally Hawkins in The Shape of Water
Frances McDormand in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Meryl Streep in The Post
Mihelle Williams in All the Money in the World

Best Actress - Comedy or Musical
Judi Dench in Victoria & Abdul
Helen Mirren in The Leisure Seeker
Margot Robbie in I, Tonya
Saoirse Ronan in Lady Bird
Emma Stone in Battle of the Sexes

Best Supporting Actress
Mary J. Blige in Mudbound
Hong Chau in Downsizing
Allison Janney in I, Tonya
Laurie Metcalf in Lady Bird
Octavia Spencer in The Shape of Water

Best Actor - Drama
Thimothee Chalamet in Call Me by Your Name
Daniel Day-Lewis in Phantom Thread
Tom Hanks in The Post
Gary Oldman in Darkest Hour
Denzel Washington in Roman J. Israel, Esq.

Best Actor - Comedy or Musical
Steve Carell in Battle of the Sexes
Ansel Elgort in Baby Driver
James Franco in The Disaster Artist
Hugh Jackman in The Greatest Showman
Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out

Best Supporting Actor
Willem Dafoe in The Florida Project
Armie Hamer in Call Me by Your Name
Richard Jenkins in The Shape of Water
Christopher Plummer in All The Money in the World
Sam Rockwell in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

Best Screenplay
Guillermo del Toro and Vanessa Taylor for The Shape of Water
Greta Gerwig for Lady Bird
Liz Hannah and Josh Singer for The Post
Martin McDonagh for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Aaron Sorkin for Molly's Game

Best Original Score
Carter Burwell for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Alexandre Desplat for The Shape of Water
Jonny Greenwood for Phantom Thread
John Williams for The Post
Hans Zimmer for Dunkirk

Best Original Song
Home from Ferdinand
Mighty River from Mudbound
Remember Me from Coco
The Star from The Star
This is Me from The Greatest Showman

To check motion picture and television nominations go official site here.  Know always talk about movies but fell like sharing that many of the nominated shows look/feel like "long movies" (which I simply LOVE!!) and the best TV category no doubt is Best Performance by an actress in a Television Series - Drama where actresses performances are truly outstanding in great-to-binge-watching like a "long movie".

By the way on December 13 at 8:00pm ET on NBC the Golden Globes 75th Anniversary Special will air.  The star-studded show is part of the 75th Anniversary celebrations and will be a funny, poignant and celebratory walk down memory lane featuring clips, exclusive behind-the-scenes goodies, original interviews and the special memories of those who, through the years, have become part of our Golden Globe family. Produced by dick clark productions (dcp) in association with the HFPA, the two-hour special will be hosted by Eric McCormack and Debra Messing.

Nominations by Motion Picture
The Shape of Water 7
The Post 6
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri 6
Lady Bird 4
All the Money in the World  3
Call Me By Your Name 3
Dunkirk 3
The Greatest Showman 3
I, Tonya 3
Battle of the Sexes 2
Coco 2
The Disaster Artist 2
Ferdinand 2
Get Out 2
Molly's Game 2
Mudbound 2
Phantom Thread 2
A Fantastic Woman 1
Baby Driver 1
The Boss Baby 1
The Breadwinner 1
Darkest Hour 1
Downsizing 1
First They Killed My Father  1
The Florida Project 1
In the Fade 1
The Leisure Seeker 1
Loveless 1
Loving Vincent 1
Roman J. Israel , Esq. 1
The Square 1
The Star 1
Victoria & Abdul 1

#Oscars2018 Live Action Shorts Shortlist

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On Monday the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced that 10 live action short films will advance in the voting process for the 90th Academy Awards. A record 165 pictures had originally qualified in the category.

Members of the Short Films and Feature Animation Branch viewed all the eligible entries for the preliminary round of voting.

Short Films and Feature Animation Branch members will now select five nominees from among the 10 titles on the shortlist. Branch screenings will be held in Los Angeles, London, New York and San Francisco in January.

Nominations for the 90th Academy Awards will be announced on Tuesday, January 23, 2018.

The 10 films are listed below in alphabetical order by title in English.

DeKalb Elementary, Reed Van Dyk, USA
The Eleven O’Clock, Derin Seale, Australia
Facing Mecca, Jan-Eric Mack, Switzerland
Icebox, Daniel Sawka, USA
Lost Face, Sean Meehan, Australia and Canada
My Nephew Emmett, Kevin Wilson, Jr.,
Naissance d'une étoile  (Rise of a Star), James Bort, France
The Silent Child, Chris Overton, UK
Watu Wote: All of Us, Katja Benrath, Germany and Kenya
Témoins (Witnesses), David Koch, France and Lebanon

The 90th Oscars will be held on Sunday, March 4, 2018, at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 6:30 p.m. ET/3:30 p.m. PT.

As usual below are the trailers but after checking the posts with other shorts (documentary and animation) noticed some are gone.  My best suggestion is to watch FAST as surely some videos will disappear soon.

DeKalb Elementary by Reed Van Dyk
Inspired by an actual 911 call placed during a school shooting incident in Atlanta, Georgia.



The Eleven O’Clock by Derin Seale
The delusional patient of a psychiatrist believes he is actually the psychiatrist. As they each attempt to treat each other the session gets increasingly out of control.



Facing Mecca by Jan-Eric Mack
The hospital calls Fareed; his wife's situation is critical; the cancer has reached its terminal stage. Pensioner Roli comes to his help and takes him to see his wife who passes away shortly after. Her funeral falls under the jurisdiction of Amrikon council. Fareed wants to see his wife buried in accordance with Muslim rites. Roli is keen to help Fareed and his daughters but problems quickly arise: the graves in the local cemetery have not been aligned to face Mecca; the council is unable to carry out the burial within 24 hours after death. Councillor Thomas Künzli assures everyone that they'll organise things for the following week. Unimpressed by the council's tactical heal-dragging, Roli offers a more creative idea: a family plot would allow for the body to be buried diagonally - facing Mecca. But even family graves are exhumed after 25 years and allocated anew. For Muslims this disturbance of peace is an absolute taboo.



Icebox by Daniel Sawka
About Oscar, a young boy from Honduras, who is caught crossing the US border and sent to an immigrant processing for minors.



Lost Face, Sean Meehan
Subienkow is in mortal danger. The fort he and his fellow fur thieves have erected in the snow is in flames - attacked by the very tribe they enslaved to build it - now only he and Big Ivan remain. As Ivan is tortured before him Subienkow must think fast to escape the terrible, protracted death that awaits him. He calls over the chief, Makamuk, and begins to bargain...



My Nephew Emmett by Kevin Wilson, Jr.
At 2:30AM on August 28, 1955 in the most racially divided state in the country, 64 year-old Mose Wright tries to protect his 14 year-old nephew Emmett Till from two racist killers out for blood. Based on the true story of the 1955 murder of Emmett Louis Till. 



Naissance d'une étoile (Rise of a Star) by James Bort
Emma is about to be the new Ballerina. But something upsets her. A secret. A secret liable to undermine what she has spent a whole life on.



The Silent Child by Chris Overton
Set in rural England and inspired by real life events. The Silent Child centres around a profoundly deaf four year old girl named Libby who is born into a middle class family and lives in a world of silence until a caring social worker teaches her the gift of communication.



Watu Wote: All of Us by Katja Benrath
For almost a decade Kenya has been targeted by terrorist attacks of the Al-Shabaab. Especially the border region between Kenya and Somalia is considered highly dangerous. An atmosphere of anxiety and mistrust between Muslims and Christians is growing. Until in December 2015, Muslim bus passengers showed that solidarity can prevail.



Témoins (Witnesses), David Koch
Stéphane, a freelance war photographer, is covering the Syrian conflict. She follows the daily existence of a young couple: Farah, a schoolteacher, and Omar, a doctor. During fighting, Stéphane takes a photo of Omar. A photo that could make headlines in the western media. Omar, convinced that the publication of this photo will put his life at risk, asks Stéphane not to send it off. But given the urgency, Stéphane has already forwarded her photos to her press agency in France: it is too late, the photo is released, altering the lives of both Stéphane and Omar.

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