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‘There Will be Blood’ wins top Critics’ Awards
Chris Michaud
NEW YORK—“There Will Be Blood” took top honors from the National Society
of Film Critics on Saturday, scoring wins for best picture, best actor
for Daniel Day-Lewis and best director for Paul Thomas Anderson.
The strong showing by “There Will be Blood,” a grim tale of power,
corruption and greed surrounding an early 20th-century oil prospector
(Day-Lewis), put the epic drama in solid contention for next month’s
Oscars.
The movie by Anderson, renowned for such offbeat fare as “Boogie Nights”
and “Magnolia,” was his loose adaptation of a 1927 Upton Sinclair novel,
“Oil!”
Julie Christie was named best actress by the critics’ association for
her role as a woman struggling with Alzheimer’s disease in “Away From
Her.”
With the win, Christie added to a list of prizes that position her as a
front-runner for the best-actress Oscar. She already has been cited by
several well-known groups, including the National Board of Review of
Motion Pictures, and nominated for best actress by the Screen Actors
Guild among others.
The National Society of Film Critics includes 61 members from major
newspapers in Los Angeles, Boston, New York and Chicago as well as from
Time, Newsweek, The New Yorker and Salon.com.
Critics’ awards are important in helping build momentum heading toward
the Academy Awards, or Oscars, which are the world’s top film awards
given out on the final Sunday in February by the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences. Honors for best supporting performances went
to Casey Affleck for the biopic “The Assassination of Jesse James by the
Coward Robert Ford,” and Cate Blanchett in a gender-bending performance
as one of six characters embodying an aspect of musician Bob Dylan’s
life and work in “I’m Not There.”
The award for best foreign language film was won by Romania’s “Four
Months, Three Weeks and Two Days,” about a woman’s attempts to secure an
illegal abortion. The film also won the top prize at the Cannes Film
Festival in May.
The film critics, in their 42nd annual awards, named “No End in Sight,”
the documentary about the Bush administration’s policies in Iraq and the
war there, as the year’s best nonfiction film.
Shut out of the awards were highly touted films including “Sweeney Todd”
and the Coen brothers’ “No Country for Old Men” that won several prizes
in the award season’s early weeks. Tamara Jenkins won best screenplay
for “The Savages,” a comic drama she also directed, starring Laura
Linney and Philip Seymour Hoffman as siblings coping with their ailing
father. |