NEW YORK — Brady Corbet’s 3 1/2-hour postwar epic “The Brutalist” gained easiest movie from the Untouched York Movie Critics Circle on Tuesday, year its govern, Adrien Brody, additionally gained easiest actor.
The win notches an early awards-season victory for one of the most fall’s most-talked about films. “The Brutalist,” which A24 will release Dec. 20, stars Brody as László Toth, a visionary Hungarian Jewish architect who flees WWII Budapest for America.
Fresh off winning two awards at Monday evening’s Gotham Awards, RaMell Ross’ “Nickel Boys” picked up any other pair of honors. Ross gained for steering and the movie’s director of pictures, Jomo Fray, took easiest cinematography honors. “Nickel Boys,” which opens then era, is shot in large part from a first-person point of view in telling the tale, tailored from Colson Whitehead’s book, of 2 Twilight youngsters at an abusive reform college in Jim Crow-era Florida.
The critics staff, which utmost date awarded Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon” easiest movie, will hand out awards in a rite on Jan. 8.
Highest movie: “The Brutalist”
Best director: RaMell Ross, “Nickel Boys”
Best actress: Marianne Jean-Baptiste, “Hard Truths”
Best actor: Adrian Brody, “The Brutalist”
Best screenplay: Sean Baker, “Anora”
Highest supporting actress: Carol Kane, “Between the Temples”
Best supporting actor: Kieran Culkin, “A Real Pain”
Highest world movie: “All We Imagine as Light”
Highest Non-Fantasy Movie: “No Other Land”
Highest cinematography: Jomo Fray, “Nickel Boys”
Highest first movie: “Janet Planet”
Highest animated movie: “Flow”
Particular award: To Save and Mission: The MoMA World Pageant of Movie Preservation