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  • All of Us Strangers: If M. Night Shyamalan Was Queer and Romantic and British and Gen X (and Still Any Good)

    All of Us Strangers: If M. Night Shyamalan Was Queer and Romantic and British and Gen X (and Still Any Good)

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    A writer is an essentially lonely person. Someone, in fact, who usually prefers to be alone. Except when they start to realize that perhaps they became a writer precisely because of that inherent loneliness in the first place. This seems to be the case for the mononymous Adam (Andrew Scott), living practically alone in a new building that still has yet to lease out any of its apartments to fresh tenants. The apartment tower seems to lie just out of reach of London, though Adam and his soon-to-be-lover, Harry (Paul Mescal), keep referring to how they live “in” London. Indeed, Adam admits that he’s the last of his friends to remain “in” the city, with everyone else surrendering to the inevitable move to the country, where they can properly raise their families. Adam, being a gay man, automatically counts himself out from “that life.” The so-called conventional one, that is. Because, even for as “modern” as these times are supposed to be, there are still so many judgments and limitations projected onto the LGBTQIA+ community. And for a man of Adam’s generation (X), there remains so many lingering insecurities about his sexuality as a result of a childhood spent not only in the “wrong” era to be gay, but the wrong place as well. For Thatcher-run Britain wasn’t exactly open and inviting to the homo set (any more than Reagan-run America was). 

    Which is why homosexuality started to feel like an “underground movement” rather than a mere sexual preference. The illicit nature of it, particularly in the late 70s and early 80s, served as a means to condition many gay men to get off on the secrecy and anonymity aspects of it more than the sex act itself. Not quite knowing how to “function” sexually once things became slightly less taboo. This is the transitional mind fuck Gen X gay men were subjected to, enduring the repression of sexuality in the 80s, the AIDS scare that lasted from the beginning of that decade and well into the mid-90s and the sudden about-face toward total gender and sexual fluidity in the twenty-first century. It would be enough to give anyone sexuality whiplash, particularly a British person, with their background so fundamentally steeped in stodginess and restraint. This is the place Adam (whose biblical name feels deliberately tongue-in-cheek [no BJ pantomime intended]) is coming from. And it’s compounded by the fact that he’s partially “stuck” at the age he was when his mother (Claire Foy) and father (Jamie Bell) both died in a car accident on Christmas Eve of 1987 (this year is also significant as it’s when the book the film is based on, Strangers by Taichi Yamada, was released).

    Our introduction to Adam is one of palpable loneliness as writer-director Andrew Haigh (known for Weekend and Looking, among other things) shows him staring longingly out of his floor-to-ceiling glass window at the outline of London. Which is, again, just beyond his reach. The city hasn’t fully expanded to his neck of the woods quite yet, though with rising prices and a shortage of housing, London will make it to his “outskirts” soon enough. The building, in fact, was actually shot in East London’s Stratford. Which is at least forty-five minutes’ worth of travel into Central London. His perennial position as an outsider is thus solidified to viewers geographically as well. This “outsiderness” extends even to his chosen profession as a writer (though, as he says, not a “proper” writer, but one for TV). This being the most voyeuristic kind of profession there is. A skill rooted in observation and recording. Never being quite “in the story” yourself, though constantly trying to put “a version” of who you think you are in it. That Adam chooses to write scripts wherein he can control the narrative also has Psych 101 implications. Since he couldn’t control the death of his parents or the way in which he was treated by homophobes in his youth. But he can control everything in the scenarios he comes up with on the page. 

    Unlike trying to control Harry’s direct approach one evening after seeing Adam so many times staring up at his window from down below. This being the umpteenth time he’s done so after a false fire alarm goes off and Adam is the only person (out of two) foolish enough to fall for it by vacating the building. Knocking on his door once Adam goes back inside and essentially begging to, er, enter, Harry makes a final effort to win Adam over by riffing on Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s “The Power of Love” with the line, “There’s vampires at my door.” This specifically alludes to the lyrics, “I’ll protect you from the hooded claw/Keep the vampires from your door.” While Harry likely wouldn’t have any idea what that song is (if we’re to go by Mescal’s own cusping between millennial and Gen Z age of twenty-eight), it’s nice to think that he could be attuned enough with British pop music’s past to make such a casual reference. To that end, there is a moment where he tells Adam he wants to “watch old episodes of Top of the Pops from before I was born” with him. Sit on the couch eating takeaway together like a right proper couple that’s surrendered fully to the dull comfort of monogamy. Because, yes, even the gays have settled for it by now. Gotten used to the idea that monogamy is for everyone. Even though, as Henry Willson (Jim Parsons) in Hollywood put it, “Sure, holding a guy’s hand in public, walking down the street, you know, you wait for a brick in the back of the head. It doesn’t come. Well, then, before you know it, your guy wants to play house. Have you ever spent a Saturday picking out some cheerful, daffodil-colored linoleum for the kitchen? I have, Ernie. And it is enough to make you wistful for the days of secretive sodomy.”

    Adam is not necessarily “that type of gay,” but he is very clearly still imbued with the “gay guilt” of his generation. This being one of the reasons why he refuses Harry’s initial forward advances. That and, well, his heart sort of had to close entirely after his parents died. An automatic defense mechanism against ever attaching again. What with getting so badly burned the first time around via every person’s most formative attachment: the one with their parents. This is why Adam seeks so desperately to return to the past—the only known period in his life where he still had two (theoretical) protectors. 

    While Adam tries to wrap himself as much as possible up into the past by writing about it in screenplay form, he doesn’t seem to realize that he’s been trapped in it for quite some time. Perpetually locked inside that traumatic period of his life. Not just because of his parents’ death, but because losing them, in a certain sense, kept him frozen in a false identity. That is, a false hetero identity. One that didn’t allow him to ever fully be himself, or rather, be known as his true self. Because, although it’s “liberating,” in a way, to lose your parents and be forever free of any judgments they might have over you, it also means that you’ll never know if that formerly hidden part of yourself might have actually been accepted and embraced. As Haigh stated, “What I’ve always been interested in doing, and especially with this [film], is talking about queerness in relationship to family, and how complicated it can be in relationship to family…especially if you grew up in a generation of the 80s and into the early 90s, where it was very different than it is now—thank God.” And yet, there are times when it doesn’t seem that different. And the fact that a still-young Harry can recall his own childhood being rife with anti-gay sentiments (“It’s probably why we hate [the word] ‘gay’ so much now. It was always like, ‘Your haircut’s gay.’ Or, ‘The sofa’s gay.’ ‘Your trainers are gay, your school bag’s gay’”) speaks to how “drastic change” didn’t occur until very recently (something the present generation of twinks takes endlessly for granted). 

    This is part of why, when Adam tells his mother about his sexuality, she can’t believe he would actually “choose” such a life. Such a lonely life, at that. Still trapped in her 1987 Britain mentality, she asks, “Aren’t people nasty to you?” He assures, “No, no. Things are different now.” She asks again, “So they aren’t nasty?” He shrugs, “Not allowed, anyway.” But, of course, as Trump supporters (and Trump himself) have shown, people always find ways of getting around things that “aren’t allowed.” When Adam also informs her that men and women can marry the same sex now, she balks, “Isn’t that like having your cake and eating it?” Turns out, his confession to Mother isn’t going as well as he thought. Is actually bringing him a worse kind of pain than before. Compounded by her saying, “Oh God, what about this awful, ghastly disease? I’ve seen the adverts on the…on the news and with the gravestone.” “Everything is different now,” he insists again. Or so we would like to believe…

    In an interview with Time, Haigh addressed one of the criticisms the LGBTQIA+ community has accused the movie of, which is that it reemphasizes the notion (which was only just starting to slightly go away) that being queer is the most isolating and alienating experience a person could have. But Haigh feels differently about the underlying message of his film, stating, “I understand that that can be an interpretation. Personally, I don’t feel that. There is hope in the fact that he has understood that, basically, he is capable of being in love and being loved and being there for someone else that might need him in that moment. By the end of the film, to me, it is basically saying that what is important in life is love in whatever way you manage to find that, whether it’s in a relationship, whether it’s with your parents, whether it’s with a friend. You go through life finding love, losing love, and finding it again.” And Adam has found it again, however ephemerally, with his spectral parents.

    As for Adam’s mother, the more she thinks about it, the more his gayness makes sense to her. He was so “odd” and “sensitive,” after all. And apparently always trying to run away. When she asks where he was trying to run away, he tells her that he reckons London. Making him yet another Bronski Beat cliche. Luckily, Haigh stops short of featuring “Smalltown Boy” in the movie, instead opting for a “less overt” queer band in the form of Pet Shop Boys. Who have never much talked about their sexuality (why bother when all of their music is dripping with the subject and “lifestyle”). But as recently as their latest single, “Loneliness,” it’s clear the duo knows all about the distinct kind of loneliness that a man such as Adam suffers from. A loneliness that his mother is also convinced gay men are more prone to, even if, as Adam asserts, “Everything is different now.”

    The past itself is, alas, as much of a ghost as his parents are. And it’s a kind of haunting that Adam seems to relish for its unique sting of pain-pleasure. For example, listening to Fine Young Cannibals’ “Johnny Come Home” as he writes, “EXT. SUBURBAN HOUSE, 1987” on his computer, it’s easy to see that the past is the present for Adam. As it is for many other people who prefer not to admit that to themselves. Even Adam tries not to fully admit it aloud, brushing aside Harry’s heartfelt apology when he finds out that Adam’s parents died in a car accident just before he turned twelve. “It was a long time ago,” he tells Harry. “Yeah, I don’t think that matters,” Harry replies. And it doesn’t. For trauma and woundedness never really go away. Especially when ceaselessly suppressed. 

    And yes, listening to the music from his childhood is a key part of crawling into the “comfortable” pain of his youth. Comfortable because it is familiar. Seeing his room just as it was when he was a preteen leads him to thumb through records like Erasure’s Circus and Frankie Goes to Hollywoood’s Welcome to the Pleasuredome (which “The Power of Love” appears on). Even when Adam goes out to a club with Harry, the song playing for the dance floor, Joe Smooth’s “Promised Land,” is straight out of 1987. Everywhere he goes, that year, that time in his life haunts him. At one point during post-coital candor, he muses to Harry, “Things are better now, of course they are, but…it doesn’t take much to make you feel the way you felt.” It reiterates what he already told his mother, but with the admission that, if you grow up a certain way, are conditioned to have a certain “look over your shoulder” response to people, it doesn’t ever truly dissipate. Even in the late 90s, when things were starting to shift more palpably, especially with AIDS “calming down,” a Gen X man like Adam was never truly going to feel “safe” enough to be “himself.” 

    Talking of the 90s, Haigh’s decision to include 1997’s “Death of a Party” by Blur as the soundtrack to a very trippy portion of the club sequence is also pointed. For, in addition to Blur speaking about the end of Britpop’s reign, this song has long been regarded as a metaphor for AIDS. After all, gay men were only too happy to party in the late 70s and early 80s…until an unknown disease, a “mysterious illness” started making people—primarily “fags”—drop like flies. So much for the “party.” A word Madonna famously included as part of an AIDS awareness insert placed among the liner notes of her Like A Prayer album with the phrase, “AIDS Is No Party!” In other words, don’t think you can go around fucking freely as you used to in the days before the novel virus. With AIDS came yet more cannon fodder for suppression. To turn inward and avoid one’s desires altogether. As Adam seemed to do, telling Harry, “I’d always felt lonely, even before [my parents died]. This was a new feeling. Like, uh, terror. That I’d always be alone now. And then, as I got older, that feeling just…solidified. It just, uh, it did not…” He motions toward his heart after trailing off, finishing the thought with, “…here all the time.” Harry looks at him with teary-eyed empathy, prompting Adam to continue, “And then losing them just got tangled up with all the other stuff. Like being gay. Just feeling like…the future doesn’t matter.” Of course, it also felt like it didn’t matter when, as a gay man, death was all around. Pervasive. Perhaps, in some sense, Adam could even associate his parents’ death with the “gay disease” that caused everyone who came into contact with “queers” to die. 

    Getting the chance to tell his parents—even if only their ghosts—who he really is proves to be, if not “cathartic” then at least a release. When Adam’s father tells his son that he’s proud of him, Adam replies, “I haven’t done anything to be proud of. I’ve just muddled through.” His father rebuts, “No, but you got through it. Some tough times, I’m sure, and…you’re still here.” Even this, too, feels like a nod to the generation of gay men who were not only mercilessly ridiculed, but also forced to watch so many of their own fall prey to the cruelest kind of death. To survive through something like that would, of course, serve as a lingering trauma unto itself. Indeed, there are times when the viewer might think that Adam himself is a ghost who doesn’t know it yet (Bruce Willis in The Sixth Sense-style), that maybe his telltale “fever” was a symptom he had while dying of AIDS. But no, that’s not the Shyamalan-oriented element here. Instead, Adam is subjected to a much more heartbreaking fate. 

    One that only Frankie Goes to Hollywood (“The Power of Love” is a subliminal essence during the tripped-out club scene as well, its presence seemingly omni—a punctuating motif to cut through the loneliness) can try to even vaguely soothe. The band’s lead singer, Holly Johnson, was himself diagnosed with HIV in 1991. But it was even before then that he sang on “The Power of Love,” “Dreams are like angels/They keep bad at bay, bad at bay/Love is the light/Scaring darkness away/I’m so in love with you/Purge the soul/Make love your goal.” Even when you’ve been burned in such an inexplicably horrible way by it in the past.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • ‘Past Lives’ Named Best Picture by National Society of Film Critics

    ‘Past Lives’ Named Best Picture by National Society of Film Critics

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    The National Society of Film Critics has selected Past Lives as the best picture of 2023.

    May December and The Zone of Interest each received two awards. May December was recognized with awards for best screenplay and supporting actor, Charles Melton. Zone of Interest helmer Jonathan Glazer was named best director, with star Sandra Hüller receiving recognition as best actress for her performances in both Zone of Interest and Anatomy of a Fall.

    Best actor went to All of Us StrangersAndrew Scott, and The Holdovers‘ Da’Vine Joy Randolph won best supporting actress. Best cinematography went to Rodrigo Prieto for Killers of the Flower Moon.

    The NSFC, founded in 1966 and made up of more than 60 critics from prominent outlets across the country, annually votes on its selections for best picture, director, actor, actress, supporting actor and actress, screenplay and cinematography. Awards may also be given out to film not in the English language, nonfiction film, production design and film heritage.

    This year, the group began with a number of special awards, including film heritage honors for Criterion Channel and Facets, Kim’s Video, Scarecrow Video and Vidiots.

    The NSFC praised Criterion for its “adventurous, wide-ranging, finely curated selection of films, ranging from American independents to world cinema to short films to classic Hollywood, making readily available the kind of repertory cinema that every city should have.”

    Facet’s, Kim’s Video, Scarecrow Video and Vidiots were recognized for “maintaining wide-reaching libraries of films on disc and tape and making those libraries available to the general public.”

    Voting is conducted via a weighted ballot system, the group explained on its X (formerly known as Twitter) account. On the first ballot, members vote for their top three choices, with the first choice getting three points, second choice getting two points and third choice getting one point. The nominee that receives the most points and appears on the majority of ballots wins. If no winner is declared on the first ballot, the category goes to a second ballot, without proxies. Voting continues with as many rounds as necessary until a nominee receives the most points and appears on the majority of ballots.

    Any film that debuted in theaters or on streaming platforms in the U.S. during 2023 was eligible for awards consideration.

    Last year, the NSFC named Tár as its best film of 2022, with Cate Blanchett also awarded best actress for her starring role and writer-director Todd Field getting the best screenplay award. Separately, The Banshees of Inisherin‘s Colin Farrell won best actor for his performances in both that film and After Yang, and Banshees‘ Kerry Condon was named best supporting actress.

    A complete list of the winners and runners-up from 2023 follows.

    Best picture: Past Lives
    Runners-up:
    The Zone of Interest
    Oppenheimer

    Best director: Jonathan Glazer, The Zone of Interest
    Runners-up:
    Todd Haynes, May December
    Christopher Nolan, Oppenheimer

    Best actor: Andrew Scott, All of Us Strangers
    Runners-up:
    Jeffrey Wright, American Fiction
    Cillian Murphy, Oppenheimer

    Best actress: Sandra Hüller, Anatomy of a Fall and The Zone of Interest
    Runners-up:
    Emma Stone, Poor Things
    Lily Gladstone, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Best supporting actor: Charles Melton, May December
    Runners-up: Robert Downey, Jr., Oppenheimer, and Ryan Gosling, Barbie (tie)

    Best supporting actress: Da’Vine Joy Randolph, The Holdovers
    Runners-up:
    Penélope Cruz, Ferrari
    Rachel McAdams, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret

    Best screenplay: Samy Burch, May December
    Runners-up:
    Celine Song, Past Lives
    David Hemingson, The Holdovers

    Best cinematography: Rodrigo Prieto, Killers of the Flower Moon
    Runners-up:
    Łukasz Żal, The Zone of Interest
    Hoyte van Hoytema, Oppenheimer

    Best experimental film: Jean Luc-Godard’s Trailer of a Film That Will Never Exist: Phony Wars

    Film heritage award: Criterion Channel

    Film heritage award: Facets, Kim’s Video, Scarecrow Video and Vidiots

    Special citation for a film awaiting U.S. distribution: Víctor Erice’s Close Your Eyes

    This story was first published on Jan. 6 at 10:05 a.m.

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    Hilary Lewis

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  • Video: ‘All of Us Strangers’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘All of Us Strangers’ | Anatomy of a Scene

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    My name is Andrew Haigh, and I am the director and screenwriter of ‘All of Us Strangers.’ So here we have Adam, played by Andrew Scott, meeting his parents again for the first time after they’ve been dead for 30 years. And the dad is played by Jamie Bell, and the mother, who is about to emerge from his childhood home, is played by Claire Foy. “Yes, it is you.” And I find this a really kind of special, strange, odd moment. I mean, the idea of meeting someone that you have lost is so powerful and strange and unusual. But what I like, is that Adam is not surprised almost. He’s not even afraid to go in. He wants this reconnection. “Whereabouts?” “Do you live by yourself?” “Do you own your own place?” “Yeah. It’s just a flat.” “What did I tell you? What did I tell you? I told you he’d be doing well for himself, didn’t I?” And this was actually shot in my own childhood home, where I lived until about the age of eight. So it was a magical experience shooting here. It felt like a haunted house. “Now, I always knew you’d be creative.” It was very important to me that they didn’t feel like traditional ghosts. I didn’t want to get wrapped up in the logic of regular ghost stories. They touch him. We see that touch very, very early on. There’s a lot of touch and tenderness within this film. And that was so key to me. And it’s strange, because they’re treating him like he is their son, but at the same time, they’re offering him a drink. He’s clearly not a young boy anymore. And I think slowly in the scene, I want you to really feel like, oh, yes, we’re not in the present day. The way the parents are dressed. The fact they’re both smoking. The language that they use was really important to me, because I wanted the audience to be unsure of what we were seeing. Are they ghosts? Are they manifestations of his subconscious? Is it a fantasy? And I wanted to play with those different elements, so it felt like it could be all of those things, and keep making you ask questions about what is real and what is not real. [CLINKING]

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    Mekado Murphy

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  • The Heartbreaking Confessions, Hot Sex, and Sweaty Nightclubs of ‘All of Us Strangers’

    The Heartbreaking Confessions, Hot Sex, and Sweaty Nightclubs of ‘All of Us Strangers’

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    Writer-director Andrew Haigh and his DP take Vanity Fair inside the making of their acclaimed film’s most striking scenes—from the sexiest to the saddest to, yes, the strangest.

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    David Canfield

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  • ‘All of Us Strangers’ Star Andrew Scott on “Playing Love” After ‘Fleabag,’ Working Opposite Paul Mescal: “Couldn’t Have Imagined Doing It With Anyone Else”

    ‘All of Us Strangers’ Star Andrew Scott on “Playing Love” After ‘Fleabag,’ Working Opposite Paul Mescal: “Couldn’t Have Imagined Doing It With Anyone Else”

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    As All of Us Strangers begins to rack up the awards season accolades — so far being nominated at the Gothams, Film Independent Spirits and National Board of Review Awards — stars Andrew Scott, Claire Foy and Jamie Bell premiered their film in Los Angeles on Saturday night alongside writer-director Andrew Haigh.

    The project stars Scott as a gay writer who begins a relationship with his mysterious neighbor (played by Paul Mescal), while at the same time discovering his parents (played by Foy and Bell) appear to be living just as they were on the day they died, 30 years before.

    “I thought it was really one of the most extraordinary scripts I’d ever read. Truly heartbreaking,” Scott told The Hollywood Reporter of taking on the project. “I was really in bits after reading the script and the finished movie really doesn’t differ too much from the original script.”

    Scott and Mescal — who wasn’t in attendance at the event — are getting particular attention for their chemistry, as the Fleabag actor said they knew each other just a little bit before filming, but “we formed a really, really close bond. I absolutely adore Paul, he was such an incredible colleague. He’s such a soulful and intelligent and hardworking actor, it was wonderful. Couldn’t have imagined doing it with anyone else.”

    Both actors are fresh off of starring as romantic leads in their own hit shows — Mescal in Normal People and Scott in Fleabag — though the latter noted that while this role is very different from playing the “Hot Priest” in Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s series, “playing love in that sense, falling in love, is a really beautiful thing to do, and chemistry is a very hard thing to quantify or qualify. I think sometimes chemistry is about great writing and actors really wanting to be there and just really understanding that acting is about just listening to each other, in the same way that a good date is about good listening.”

    Scott also weighed in on the film’s certified tear-jerker status, saying, “I really do think it’s sad, but it’s more emotional than sad, I would say. It’s this idea of what we might say to the people that are no longer in our lives — that’s a beautiful, audacious sort of premise and that’s why it’s touching.”

    “I read one review that said this is a nuclear-grade tear jerker, and I think that’s appropriate,” added Bell. “I’ve read the synopsis of this to people and they’re already kind of crying. I also think that sometimes setting that standard or expectation is a mistake, so I don’t know, go into it with an open mind, not expecting anything, and I think you’ll be rewarded.” Foy also joked that although tears are likely, they are not required: “It’s completely fine to come and not cry at all.”

    In taking on the role of Scott’s character’s late father, Bell said that the familial connection with him, as well as with Foy, came quite naturally.

    “He’s such an easy person to love, she’s a phenomenal actress. Weirdly off set we were kind of also still a family; we shot at Andrew Haigh’s childhood home and would go next door to another house that was the holding room, and me and Claire would watch the tennis, because Wimbledon was on, and [Scott] would disappear upstairs like a teenager,” Bell laughed.

    For her part, Foy said her agent called her and “basically just cried on the phone to me about how significant this was and how important this film was, and then I read [the script] and saw so many moments of my life it connected with and feelings that I’ve had about being alive and being a human being. I knew that it would affect a lot of people.”

    All of Us Strangers hits theaters Dec. 22.

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    Kirsten Chuba

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  • 2023 Gotham Awards: Winners List (Updating Live)

    2023 Gotham Awards: Winners List (Updating Live)

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    The 2023 Gotham Awards are being presented at a star-studded ceremony at New York’s Cipriani Wall Street on Monday night.

    Going into the ceremony, Past Lives, A Thousand and One and All of Us Strangers are the leading film nominees, with Past Lives and A Thousand and One each scoring three nods, including in the top category of best feature. All of Us Strangers, though not up for best feature, is nominated for a leading four awards.

    Other best feature nominees are Passages, Reality and Showing Up.

    In the TV categories, Beef leads with three nominations, with Anne Rice’s Interview with The Vampire, I’m a Virgo, Swarm, A Small Light, The Last of Us, The English and Dead Ringers each scoring two nods.

    Since 2021, the Gotham Awards has recognized performers in gender-neutral categories.

    In addition to the competitive categories, the Gotham Awards is honoring a number of films with previously announced accolades: Killers of the Flower Moon is receiving the Gotham Historical Icon & Creator Tribute; Barbie is being recognized with the Global Icon & Creator Tribute; Ferrari received the Icon & Creator Tribute for Innovation; Rustin received the Cultural Icon & Creator Tribute for Social Justice; Air took home the Visionary Icon & Creator Tribute; and Maestro is receiving the Cultural Icon & Creator Tribute.

    Writer Alex Convery accepted on behalf of Air, noting, “The movie really is about knowing your worth and fighting for it, and this is something as artists we experienced firsthand as we walked the picket lines for over 200 days this summer. It was long and grueling, but we made it through and we showed the world that we know what we’re worth.”

    Adam Driver presented Ferrari director Michael Mann with his honor, telling a story about when Mann left his wallet in a 7-Eleven and rather than waiting at a red light to get back to the store, got out of his car and ran across a major L.A. intersection. “It actually was a moment where I felt I really saw Michael; if he does this with lost time on a wallet, how does it translate to being on a film set?” Driver said, explaining how the director “doesn’t want anything to get in the way of what he’s trying to do, including himself.” Mann dedicated the award to late Ferrari screenwriter Troy Kennedy Martin, saying, “He’s really the heart and the core of the innovation.”

    Gotham Award nominees are selected by committees of film and TV 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 award recipients.

    Recent Gotham Award winners have included Oscar winners Everything Everywhere All at Once, CODA, Nomadland, Marriage Story, American Factory, Moonlight, Spotlight and Birdman.

    A complete list of this year’s Gotham nominees follows. Winners will be noted as they’re announced live. Refresh for the latest.

    Best Feature

    Passages
    Ira Sachs, director; Saïd Ben Saïd, Michel Merkt, producers (MUBI)

    Past Lives
    Celine Song, director; David Hinojosa, Pamela Koffler, Christine Vachon, producers (A24)

    Reality
    Tina Satter, director; Brad Becker-Parton, Riva Marker, Greg Nobile, Noah Stahl, producers (HBO Films)

    Showing Up
    Kelly Reichardt, director; Neil Kopp, Vincent Savino, Anish Savjani, producers (A24)

    A Thousand and One
    A.V. Rockwell, director; Julia Lebedev, Rishi Rajani, Eddie Vaisman, Lena Waithe, Bred Weston, producers (Focus Features)

    Best International Feature

    All of Us Strangers
    Andrew Haigh, director; Graham Broadbent, Peter Czernin, Sarah Harvey, producers (Searchlight Pictures)

    Anatomy of a Fall
    Justine Triet, director; Marie-Ange Luciani, David Thion, producers (NEON)
    (WINNER)

    Poor Things
    Yorgos Lanthimos, director; Ed Guiney, Yorgos Lanthimos, Andrew Lowe, Emma Stone, producers (Searchlight Pictures)

    Tótem
    Lila Avilés, director; Lila Avilés, Tatiana Graullera, Louise Riousse, producers (Sideshow/Janus Films)

    The Zone of Interest
    Jonathan Glazer, director; Ewa Puszczynska, James Wilson, producers (A24)

    Best Documentary Feature

    20 Days in Mariupol
    Mstyslav Chernov, director; Raney Aronson-Rath, Mstyslav Chernov, Derl McCrudden, Michelle Mizner, producers (PBS Distribution)

    Against the Tide
    Sarvnik Kaur, director; Koval Bhatia, Sarvnik Kaur, producers (Snooker Club Films, A Little Anarky Films)

    Apolonia, Apolonia
    Lea Glob, director; Sidsel Lønvig Siersted, producer (Danish Documentary Production)

    Four Daughters
    Kaouther Ben Hania, director; Nadim Cheikhrouha, producer (Kino Lorber) (WINNER)

    Our Body
    Claire Simon, director; Kristina Larsen, producer (Cinema Guild)

    Breakthrough Director Award, Presented by Cadillac

    Raven Jackson, All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt (A24)

    Georgia Oakley, Blue Jean (Magnolia Pictures)

    Michelle Garza Cervera, Huesera (XYZ Films)

    Celine Song, Past Lives (A24)

    A.V. Rockwell, A Thousand and One (Focus Features)

    Best Screenplay

    All of Us Strangers, Andrew Haigh (Searchlight Pictures)

    Anatomy of a Fall, Justine Triet, Arthur Harari (NEON) (WINNER)

    May December, Samy Burch (Netflix)

    R.M.N., Cristian Mungiu (IFC Films)

    The Zone of Interest, Jonathan Glazer (A24)

    Outstanding Lead Performance

    Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Origin (NEON)

    Lily Gladstone, The Unknown Country (Music Box Films)

    Greta Lee, Past Lives (A24)

    Franz Rogowski, Passages (MUBI)

    Babetida Sadjo, Our Father, The Devil (Cineverse)

    Andrew Scott, All of Us Strangers (Searchlight Pictures)

    Cailee Spaeny, Priscilla (A24)

    Teyana Taylor, A Thousand and One (Focus Features)

    Michelle Williams, Showing Up (A24)

    Jeffrey Wright, American Fiction (Orion Pictures / Amazon MGM Studios)

    Outstanding Supporting Performance

    Juliette Binoche, The Taste of Things (IFC Films)

    Penélope Cruz, Ferrari (NEON)

    Jamie Foxx, They Cloned Tyrone (Netflix)

    Claire Foy, All of Us Strangers (Searchlight Films)

    Ryan Gosling, Barbie (Warner Bros. Pictures)

    Glenn Howerton, BlackBerry (IFC Films)

    Sandra Hüller, The Zone of Interest (A24)

    Rachel McAdams, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (Lionsgate)

    Charles Melton, May December (Netflix)

    Da’Vine Joy Randolph, The Holdovers (Focus Features)

    Breakthrough Series – Under 40 minutes

    Beef, Lee Sung Jin, creator; Ravi Nandan, Alli Reich, Jake Schreier, Ali Wong, Steven Yeun, executive producers (Netflix)

    High School, Clea DuVall, Sara Quin, Tegan Quin, creators; Clea Duvall, Dede Gardner, Laura Kittrell, Jeremy Kleiner, Sara Quin, Tegan Quin, Carina Sposato, executive producers (Amazon Freevee)

    I’m A Virgo, Boots Riley, creator; Tze Chun, Michael Ellenberg, Marcus Gardley, Carver Karaszewski, Jharrel Jerome, Boots Riley, Rebecca Rivo, Lindsey Springer, executive producers (Prime Video)

    Rain Dogs, Cash Carraway, creator; Cash Carraway, Sally Woodward Gentle, Lee Morris, executive producers (HBO | Max)

    Swarm, Donald Glover, Janine Nabers, creators; Ibra Ake, Donald Glover, Stephen Glover, Janine Nabers Jamal Olor, Steven Prinz, Michael Schaefer, Fam Udeorji, executive producers (Amazon Studios)

    Breakthrough Series – Over 40 minutes

    Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire
    Rolin Jones, creator; Mark Johnson, Rolin Jones, Anne Rice, Christopher Rice, Alan Taylor, executive producers (AMC)

    Dead Ringers
    Alice Birch, creator; Alice Birch, Anne Carey, Sean Durkin, Megan Ellison, Erica Kay, Ali Krug, Sue Naegle, Stacy O’Neil, David Robinson, James G. Robinson, Polly Stokes, Barbara Wall, Rachel Weisz, executive directors (Prime Video)

    The English
    Hugo Blick, creator; Hugo Blick, Emily Blunt, Greg Brenman, executive producers (Prime Video)

    The Last of Us
    Craig Mazin, Neil Druckmann, creators; Neil Druckmann, Craig Mazin, Rose Lam, Asad Qizilbash, Carolyn Strauss, Carter Swan, Evan Wells, executive producers; (HBO | Max)

    A Small Light
    Tony Phelan, Joan Rater, creator; Susanna Fogel, William Harper, Avi Nir, Tony Phelan, Joan Rater, Lisa Roos, Alon Shtruzman, Peter Traugott, executive producers (National Geographic)

    Telemarketers
    Adam Bhala Lough, Sam Lipman-Stern, directors; Nancy Abraham, Dani Bernfeld, David Gordon Green, Lisa Heller, Jody Hill, Brandon James, Sam Lipman-Stern, Adam Bhala Lough, Danny McBride, Tina Nguyen, Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie, Greg Stewart, executive producers (HBO | Max)

    Outstanding Performance in a New Series

    Jacob Anderson, Anne Rice’s Interview with The Vampire (AMC)

    Dominique Fishback, Swarm (Amazon Studios)

    Jharrel Jerome, I’m A Virgo (Prime Video)

    Natasha Lyonne, Poker Face (Peacock)

    Bel Powley, A Small Light (National Geographic)

    Bella Ramsey, The Last of Us (HBO | Max)

    Chaske Spencer, The English (Prime Video)

    Rachel Weisz, Dead Ringers ((Prime Video)

    Ali Wong, Beef (Netflix) (WINNER)

    Steven Yeun, Beef (Netflix)

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    Hilary Lewis

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