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The Toronto Film Critics Association announce 2014 TFCA award winners

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Boyhood, Richard Linklater’s era-spanning look at a Texas kid’s life from his first week of school to his first week of college, has won three top prizes at the 2014 awards of the Toronto Film Critics Association.

In addition to the film’s Best Picture award, Linklater has won Best Director, and Patricia Arquette has been named Best Supporting Actress for her role as the young protagonist’s mother.

The awards were voted by the TFCA at a meeting on the afternoon of December 14. The membership also named its three finalists for the Rogers Best Canadian Film Award Enemy, directed by Denis Villeneuve; The F Word, directed by Michael Dowse; and Mommy, directed by Xavier Dolan.

The 2014 Joe Fresh Allan King Documentary Award is given to The Overnighters; director Jesse Moss will receive a $5,000 cash prize. Albert Shin, director of the South Korean domestic drama In Her Place, was named the winner of the Scotiabank Jay Scott Prize for an emerging artist. He will be presented with a $5,000 cheque at the TFCA’s awards gala on January 6th.

At the gala, the TFCA will also announce the winner of the Manulife Student Film Award, which carries a $5,000 cash prize. It will be presented to a short film that the critics select from student entries submitted by film programs at Humber College, Ryerson University, Sheridan College and York University.

As previously announced, the 2014 recipient of the Technicolor Clyde Gilmour Award is Piers Handling, who will present a filmmaker of his choice with $50,000 worth of services from Technicolor at the January 6 gala.

The 2014 TFCA Awards will be presented at a gala dinner at Toronto’s The Carlu on Tuesday, January 6, 2015, hosted by Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival. There the TFCA will also reveal the winner of the Rogers Best Canadian Film Award, which carries a record-setting $100,000 cash prize, the richest film award in the country. The runners-up will each receive $5,000.

“In an exceptional year for Canadian cinema, we’ve chosen three boldly directed films that are so dissimilar it’s almost hard to believe they’re set in the same country,” said TFCA President Brian D. Johnson. “Enemy’s austere psychodrama portrays Toronto as a smog-lined tomb of condos and concrete, while The F Word makes the city a bright, airy playground for an agile romantic comedy. And in Mommy a drama of mental illness and parental anguish rips through a household in working-class Montreal.”

The full details of the 18th annual TFCA awards are as follows:

Best Film
Richard Linklater’s Boyhood, a cinematic masterpiece that evokes beauty in life and the inevitable passage of time

Best Director
Richard Linklater, for the singular achievement that is Boyhood

Best Actor
Tom Hardy, for playing a Welsh builder in crisis in Locke

Best Actress
Marion Cotillard, for her performance as a Polish woman navigating 1920s America in The Immigrant

Best Supporting Actor
J.K. Simmons, for his role as a tyrannical conductor in Whiplash

Best Supporting Actress
Patricia Arquette, for her role as the mother of Mason Jr. in Boyhood

Best Screenplay
The Grand Budapest Hotel, for its nuanced humour and intricate narrative dollhouse

Best Animated Feature
Isao Takahata’s delicate fable The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

Best First Feature
Ritesh Batra’s The Lunchbox

Best Foreign-Language Film
Ruben Östlund’s Force Majeure

Best Documentary Film
Jesse Moss’s The Overnighters


14th annual Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival announces schedule and tour dates

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KICK OFF 2015 IN THE COMPANY OF CANADIAN TALENT DURING
THE 14th ANNUAL CANADA’S TOP TEN FILM FESTIVAL
JANUARY 2–11AT TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX
Guests include David Cronenberg, Keanu Reeves, Sturla Gunnarsson, Maxime Giroux, Harold Crooks, Bonnie Sherr Klein, Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis

The 14th annualCanada’s Top Ten Film Festival kicks off at TIFF Bell Lightbox on January 2, 2015, offering 10 days of public screenings of the year’s top 10 features, shorts and student films. Established in 2001, the Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival celebrates excellence in Canadian cinema and raises global awareness of Canadian achievements in film. The festival features introductions and Q&A sessions with filmmakers — including Sturla Gunnarsson, Harold Crooks, Maxime Giroux, David Cronenberg, Andrew Huculiak, Marie-Hélène Cousineau and Stéphane Lafleur— as well as two special onstage events: In Conversation With... Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis on January 10, and In Conversation With... Keanu Reeves on January 11.

The Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival runs until January 11 in Toronto. The festival travels across the country with stops in major cities, including Vancouver’s The Cinematheque (January 8 to 18), Edmonton’s Metro Cinema (January 22 to February 2), Calgary’s Globe Cinema in association with the Calgary International Film Festival (February 20 to 26), Winnipeg Film Group’s Cinematheque (March 6 to 19), and Montreal’s PHI Centre (dates TBA). Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director for the Toronto International Film Festival, will sit down with Sandra Oh at TIFF's very first In Conversation With… event in Vancouver on January 18.


The Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival schedule and expected guests:

Friday, January 2
7 p.m.Monsoon—in person: director Sturla Gunnarsson

Saturday, January 3
3 p.m.Monsoon—in person: director Sturla Gunnarsson
6 p.m.Félix et Meira (Felix & Meira)—in person: director Maxime Giroux
8:45 p.m.Mommy

Sunday, January 4
4 p.m.Félix et Meira (Felix & Meira)—in person: director Maxime Giroux
6:45 p.m.Sol
9 p.m.Mommy

Monday, January 5
6 p.m.Sol—in person: director Marie-Hélène Cousineau
8:30 p.m.Tu dors Nicole—in person: director Stéphane Lafleur

Tuesday, January 6
3 p.m.Tu dors Nicole—in person: director Stéphane Lafleur
6 p.m.Violent—in person: director Andrew Huculiak
8:45 p.m.In Her Place—in person: director Albert Shin

Wednesday, January 7
3 p.m.Violent—in person: director Andrew Huculiak
7 p.m.Canada Cocktail Party—in person: Canada’s Top Ten filmmakers and special guests. The party includes a performance by We Are the City (the band behind the Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival selection Violent), and an installation by Canada’s Top Ten alumni Shayne Ehman and Seth Scriver (Asphalt Watches).

Thursday, January 8
3 p.m.In Her Place—in person: director Albert Shin

Friday, January 9
12 p.m.Higher Learning panel discussion | FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
The Rules of Engagement: Documentary Filmmaking in Canada
panelists: directors Bonnie Sherr Klein (Not a Love Story: A Film About Pornography), Harold Crooks (The Price We Pay), Elle Máijá Tailfeathers (Bihttoš) and Candy Fox (Backroads), and producer Ina Fichman (Monsoon); moderator: Rebecca Sullivan, director of the Institute for Gender Research at the University of Calgary and author of a new monograph on Klein's film.
2:30 p.m. Canadian Open Vault: Not a Love Story: A Film About Pornography | FREE
in person: director Bonnie Sherr Klein and author Rebecca Sullivan

6 p.m. Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival Student Shorts Programme
Backroads—in person: director Candy Fox
Dinner Time—in person: director Alexander Mainwaring
Elpis—in person: director Akreta Saim
Fallow—in person: director Breanna Cheek
La dernière danse sur la Main (Last Dance on the Main)—in person: director Aristofanis Soulikias
Lifers—in person: director Joel Salaysay
Light—in person: director Yassmina Karajah
Never Stop Cycling—in person: director Colin Lepper
Running Season—in person: director Grayson Moore
Tomonster—in person: director Pui Ka Wong

9 p.m. Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival Shorts Programme
Bihttoš (Rebel)—in person: director Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers
Bison—in person: director Kevan Funk
La Coupe (The Cut)—in person: director Geneviève Dulude-De Celles
Cutaway—in person: director Kazik Radwanski
Day 40—in person: director Sol Friedman
Kajutaijuq: The Spirit That Comes—in person: director Scott Brachmayer
Mynarski Death Plummet—in person: director Matthew Rankin
Sleeping Giant—in person: director Andrew Cividino
Still—in person: director Slater Jewell-Kemker
The Weatherman and the Shadowboxer—in person: director Randall Lloyd Okita

Saturday, January 10
12 p.m.The Price We Pay—in person: director Harold Crooks
3 p.m.In Conversation With... Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis—in person: Naomi Klein, Avi Lewis and Cameron Bailey
6 p.m.Maps to the Stars
9 p.m.Corbo—in person: director Mathieu Denis

Sunday, January 11
12 p.m.Corbo—in person: director Mathieu Denis
3 p.m.In Conversation With... Keanu Reeves—in person: Keanu Reeves and Cameron Bailey
6 p.m.The Price We Pay—in person: director Harold Crooks
9:15 p.m.Maps to the Stars—in person: director David Cronenberg. This screening is co-presented by
the Directors Guild of Canada

The Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival expected guests at The Cinematheque in Vancouver:

Sunday, January 18
6 p.m.In Conversation With... Sandra Oh—in person: Sandra Oh, director Ann Marie Fleming
(Window Horses) and Cameron Bailey.

Tickets and ticket packages for Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival events at TIFF Bell Lightbox are on sale now. Purchase tickets online at tiff.net, by phone from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. ET at 416.599.TIFF and 1.888.599.8433, or in person at the TIFF Bell Lightbox box office from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. ET. Pricing as follows: standard screening ticket is $10 (feature film or shorts programmes); purchase a six-pack for $50 and get six tickets for the price of five; tickets for In Conversation With... Keanu Reeves and In Conversation With… Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis are $20 each; tickets to the Canada Cocktail Party are $15 for TIFF Members and $20 for the public (19+ ID required). Canadian Open Vault and Higher Learning events are free. TIFF prefers Visa. Tickets for events at The Cinematheque in Vancouver are on sale now through their box office. Visit thecinematheque.ca for more information.

Social Media:
@TIFF_NET #TIFFCTT

About TIFF
TIFF is a charitable cultural organization whose mission is to transform the way people see the world through film. An international leader in film culture, TIFF projects include the annual Toronto International Film Festival in September; TIFF Bell Lightbox, which features five cinemas, major exhibitions, and learning and entertainment facilities; and innovative national distribution program Film Circuit. The organization generates an annual economic impact of $189 million CAD. TIFF Bell Lightbox is generously supported by contributors including Founding Sponsor Bell, the Province of Ontario, the Government of Canada, the City of Toronto, the Reitman family (Ivan Reitman, Agi Mandel and Susan Michaels), The Daniels Corporation and RBC. For more information, visit tiff.net.





Library of Congress names 25 new films for 2014 to National Film Registry

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Cinematic Treasures Named to National Film Registry
Saving Private Ryan, Luxo Jr. and Rosemary’s Baby Among Film Additions

The horrors of war, the heroism of sacrifice, a vaudeville pioneer, the devil and a master of the macabre represent the diversity of an elite selection of films that have been recognized as cultural, historic or aesthetic cinematic treasures. Librarian of Congress James H. Billington announced today the annual selection of 25 motion pictures to be named to the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress. Selection to the registry will help ensure that these films will be preserved for all time.

"The National Film Registry showcases the extraordinary diversity of America’s film heritage and the disparate strands making it so vibrant," said Billington. "By preserving these films, we protect a crucial element of American creativity, culture and history."

Spanning the period 1913-2004, the films named to the registry include Hollywood classics, documentaries, silent movies, student films, independent and experimental motion pictures. This year’s selections bring the number of films in the registry to 650, which is a small fraction of the Library’s vast moving-image collection of 1.3 million items.

The 2014 registry list includes such iconic movies as Saving Private Ryan, a treatise about the harsh realities of war, which earned director Steven Spielberg an Academy Award; the chilling 1968 horror masterpiece Rosemary’s Baby; Arthur Penn’s Western saga starring Dustin Hoffman, Little Big Man; director John Hughes’ Ferris Bueller’s Day Off; and Joel and Ethan Coen’s cult classic, The Big Lebowski.

The list also includes John Lasseter’s 1986 animated film, Luxo Jr.; the 1953 House of Wax, the first full-length 3-D color film produced and released by a major American film studio; 1971’s Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, starring Gene Wilder; Howard Hawks’ 1959 Western Rio Bravo; and Charles Laughton comic turn in the 1935 Ruggles of Red Gap. Also making the list is Efraín Gutiérrez’s 1976 independent movie, Please Don’t Bury Me Alive!, considered by historians to be the first Chicano feature film.

The documentaries and shorts named to the registry include Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport, a film examining the rescue operation that placed thousands of Jewish children with foster families in Great Britain prior to World War II; Felicia, a 13-minute short that showcases a Watts neighborhood through a teenager’s first-person narrative; and the 1980 Moon Breath Beat, created by animator Lisze Bechtold when she was a student at CalArts.

The silent films selected for preservation include The Dragon Painter, (1919) starring Hollywood’s first Asian star, Sessue Hayakawa; the 1916 social drama examining poverty and prostitution, Shoes; and Unmasked, the 1917 film directed and scripted by its star Grace Cunard. Also added to the registry are seven reels of untitled and unassembled footage featuring vaudevillian Bert Williams, the first African-American Broadway headliner and the most popular recording artist before 1920.
In 2013, the Library of Congress released a report that conclusively determined that 70 percent of the nation’s silent feature films have been lost forever and only 14 percent exist in their original 35 mm format.

Under the terms of the National Film Preservation Act, each year the Librarian of Congress names 25 films to the National Film Registry that are "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant. The films must be at least 10 years old. The Librarian makes the annual registry selections after reviewing hundreds of titles nominated by the public and conferring with Library film curators and the distinguished members of the National Film Preservation Board (NFPB). The public is urged to make nominations for next year’s registry at the NFPB’s website (www.loc.gov/film/).

For each title named to the registry, the Library of Congress Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation works to ensure that the film is preserved for future generations, either through the Library’s motion-picture preservation program or through collaborative ventures with other archives, motion-picture studios and independent filmmakers. The Packard Campus is a state-of-the-art facility where the nation’s library acquires, preserves and provides access to the world’s largest and most comprehensive collection of films, television programs, radio broadcasts and sound recordings (www.loc.gov/avconservation/).

The Packard Campus is home to more than 7 million collection items. It provides staff support for the Library of Congress National Film Preservation Board, the National Recording Preservation Board and the National Registries for film and recorded sound.

Founded in 1800, the Library of Congress is the nation’s oldest federal cultural institution. It seeks to spark imagination and creativity and to further human understanding and wisdom by providing access to knowledge through its vast collections, programs and exhibitions. Many of the Library’s rich resources can be accessed through its website at www.loc.gov.


2014 National Film Registry

13 Lakes (2004)
James Benning’s feature-length film can be seen as a series of moving landscape paintings with artistry and scope that might be compared to Claude Monet’s series of water-lily paintings. Embracing the concept of "landscape as a function of time," Benning shot his film at 13 different American lakes in identical 10-minute takes. Each is a static composition: a balance of sky and water in each frame with only the very briefest suggestion of human existence. At each lake, Benning prepared a single shot, selected a single camera position and a specific moment. The climate, the weather and the season deliver a level of variation to the film, a unique play of light, despite its singularity of composition. Curators of the Rotterdam Film Festival noted, "The power of the film is that the filmmaker teaches the viewer to look better and learn to distinguish the great varieties in the landscape alongside him. [The list of lakes] alone is enough to encompass a treatise on America and its history. A treatise the film certainly encourages, but emphatically does not take part in." Benning, who studied mathematics and then film at the University of Wisconsin, currently is on the faculty at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts).

Bert Williams Lime Kiln Club Field Day (1913)
In 1913, a stellar cast of African-American performers gathered in the Bronx, New York, to make a feature-length motion picture. The troupe starred vaudevillian Bert Williams, the first African-American to headline on Broadway and the most popular recording artist prior to 1920. After considerable footage was shot, the film was abandoned. One hundred years later, the seven reels of untitled and unassembled footage were discovered in the film vaults of the Museum of Modern Art, and are now believed to constitute the earliest surviving feature film starring black actors. Modeled after a popular collection of stories known as Brother Gardener’s Lime Kiln Club, the plot features three suitors vying to win the hand of the local beauty, portrayed by Odessa Warren Grey. The production also included members of the Harlem stage show known as J. Leubrie Hill’s Darktown Follies. Providing insight into early silent-film production (Williams can be seen applying his blackface makeup), these outtakes or rushes show white and black cast and crew working together, enjoying themselves in unguarded moments. Even in fragments of footage, Williams proves himself among the most gifted of screen comedians.

The Big Lebowski (1998)
From the unconventional visionaries Joel & Ethan Coen (the filmmakers behind Fargo and O Brother, Where Art Thou?) came this 1998 tale of kidnapping, mistaken identity and bowling. As they would again in the 2008 Burn After Reading, the Coens explore themes of alienation, inequality and class structure via a group of hard-luck, off-beat characters suddenly drawn into each other’s orbits. Jeff Bridges, in a career-defining role, stars as "The Dude," an LA-based slacker who shares a last name with a rich man whose arm-candy wife is indebted to shady figures. Joining Bridges are John Goodman, Tara Reid, Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Steve Buscemi and, in a now-legendary cameo, John Turturro. Stuffed with vignettes—each staged through the Coens’ trademark absurdist, innovative visual style—that are alternately funny and disturbing, Lebowski was only middling successful at the box office during its initial release. However, television, the Internet, home video and considerable word-of-mouth have made the film a highly quoted cult classic.

Down Argentine Way (1940)
Betty Grable’s first starring role in a Technicolor musical happened only because Alice Faye had an attack of appendicitis, but Grable took advantage of the situation and quickly made herself as important to 20th Century-Fox as Faye. Released just over a year before America entered World War II, this film and others starring Grable established her as the pinup queen. The title explains much, with Grable traveling to South America and falling in love with Don Ameche. Carmen Miranda makes her American film debut, and the Nicolas Brothers’ unparalleled dance routines dazzle.

The Dragon Painter (1919)
After becoming Hollywood’s first Asian star, Japanese-born Sessue Hayakawa, like many leading film actors of the time, formed his own production company—Haworth Pictures (combining his name with that of director William Worthington)—to gain more control over his films. The Dragon Painter, one of more than 20 feature films his company produced between 1918 and 1922, teamed Hayakawa and his wife Tsuru Aoki in the story of an obsessed, untutored painter who loses his artistic powers after he finds and marries the supposed "dragon princess." His passion and earlier pursuit of her had consumed him with the urge to create. Reviewers of the time praised the film for its seemingly authentic Japanese atmosphere, including the city of Hakone and its Shinto gates, built in Yosemite Valley, California.

Felicia (1965)
This 13-minute short subject, marketed as an educational film, records a slice of life in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles prior to the rebellions of 1965. Filmmakers Trevor Greenwood, Robert Dickson and Alan Gorg were UCLA film students when they crafted a documentary from the perspective of the unassuming-yet-articulate teenager Felicia Bragg, a high-school student of African-American and Hispanic descent. Felicia’s first-person narrative reflects her hopes and frustrations as she annotates footage of her family, school and neighborhood, creating a time capsule that’s both historically and culturally significant. Its provenance as an educational film continues today as university courses use Felicia to teach documentary filmmaking techniques and cite it as an example of how non-traditional sources, as well as mainstream television news, reflect and influence public opinion.

Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)
The late John Hughes, the king of both 1980s family comedy (Home Alone) and teen angst (Sixteen Candles), achieved a career highpoint with this funny, heartfelt tale of a teenage wiseacre (Matthew Broderick) whose day playing hooky leads not only to a host of comic misadventures but also, ultimately, to self-realization for both him and his friends. Hughes’ manner of depicting late-20th-century youth—their outward and inward lives—finds a successful vehicle in the "everyman" appeal of lead Broderick, whose conning of his parents is really an honest and earnest attempt to help his best friend. With the city of Chicago serving as backdrop and a now-iconic street performance of Twist and Shout serving as the film’s centerpiece, Ferris Bueller emerged as one of film’s greatest and most fully realized teen heroes. Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, Jennifer Grey and Jeffrey Jones co-starred in the film. This is Hughes’ first film on the registry.

The Gang’s All Here (1943)
Although not remembered as well today as those put out by MGM, 20th Century-Fox’s big Technicolor musicals stand up well in comparison. Showgirl Alice Faye, Fox’s No. 1 musical star, is romanced by a soldier who uses an assumed name and then turns out to be a rich playboy. Carmen Miranda is also featured and her outrageous costume is highlighted in the legendary musical number The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat. Busby Berkeley, who had just finished a long stint directing musicals at MGM and an earlier one at Warner Bros., directs and choreographs the film.

House of Wax (1953)
A remake of 1933’s Mystery of the Wax Museum, the 1953 House of Wax expanded upon the earlier horror tale of a mad sculptor who encases his victims’ corpses in wax. It added the dark talents of Vincent Price and helped introduce 3-D visual effects to a wide audience. House of Wax, produced by Warner Bros. and released in April 1953, is considered the first full-length 3-D color film ever produced and released by a major American film studio. Along with its technical innovations, House of Wax also solidified Vincent Price’s new role as America’s master of the macabre, and his voice resonated even more with the emerging stereophonic sound process. Though he had flirted with the fear genre earlier in his career in the 1946 Shock, Wax forever recast him as one of the first gentlemen of Hollywood horror. Along with Price, Phyllis Kirk, Frank Lovejoy and Carolyn Jones (as one of Price’s early victims) complete the cast. André de Toth directed the film.

Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport (2000)
Just prior to World War II, a rescue operation aided the youngest victims of Nazi terror when 10,000 Jewish and other children were sent from their homes and families to live with foster families and in group homes in Great Britain. This Oscar-winning film was directed by Mark Jonathan Harris, writer and director of another Oscar winner, The Long Way Home, and was produced by Deborah Oppenheimer, whose mother was among the children evacuated. The film examines the bond between parent and child, uncovering the anguish of the parents who reluctantly acknowledged they could no longer protect their children, but through their love saw a chance to protect them, by proxy if not proximity. Interviews with the surviving children reveal feelings of abandonment and estrangement that often took years to overcome. The film is a tribute not only to the children who survived, but to the people of England who agreed to rescue the refugees when U.S. leadership would not.

Little Big Man (1970)
In this Arthur Penn-directed Western, Dustin Hoffman (with exceptional assistance from make-up artist Dick Smith) plays a 121-year-old man looking back at his life as a pioneer in America’s Old West. The film is ambitious, both in its historical scope and narrative approach, which interweaves fact and myth, historical figures and events and fanciful tall tales. Little Big Man has been called an epic reinvented as a yarn, and the Western reimagined for a post-1960s audience, one already well-versed in the white hat-black hat tradition of the typical Hollywood Western saga. Against a backdrop that includes the cavalry, old-time medicine shows, life on the frontier and a climax at Custer’s Last Stand, Penn, Hoffman and scriptwriter Calder Willingham (from the novel by Thomas Berger) upend Western motifs while also still skillfully telling a series of remarkable human stories filled with tragedy and humor.

Luxo Jr. (1986)
The iconic living, moving desk lamp that now begins every Pixar motion picture (from Finding Nemo to Monsters, Inc. to Up) has its genesis in this charming, computer-animated short subject, directed by John Lasseter and produced by Lasseter and fellow Pixar visionary Bill Reeves. In the two-minute, 30-second film, two gray balance-arm lamps—one parentally large and one childishly small (the Junior of the title)—interact with a brightly colored ball. In strikingly vivid animation, Lasseter and Reeves manage to bring to joyous life these two inanimate objects and to infuse them both with personality and charm—qualities that would become the norm in such soon-to-be Pixar productions as Toy Story, Cars and WALL-E. Nominated for an Oscar in 1986 for best-animated short, Luxo Jr. was the first three-dimensional computer-animated film ever to be nominated for an Academy Award.

Moon Breath Beat (1980)
Lisze Bechtold created Moon Breath Beat, a five-minute color short subject, in 1980 while a student at California Institute of the Arts under the tutelage of artist and filmmaker Jules Engel, who founded the Experimental Animation program at CalArts. Engel asked, hypothetically, "What happens when an animator follows a line, a patch of color, or a shape into the unconscious? What wild images would emerge?"Moon Breath Beat reveals Bechtold responding with fluidity and whimsy. Her two-dimensional film was animated to a pre-composed rhythm, the soundtrack cut together afterward, sometimes four frames at a time, to match picture with track, she says. The dream-like story evolved as it was animated, depicting a woman and her two cats and how such forces as birds and the moon impact their lives. Following graduation, Bechtold was the effects animator for the Disney short The Prince and the Pauper (1990) and principal effects animator for FernGully: The Last Rainforest (1992). Now primarily an author and illustrator, she claims many of her characters were inspired by pets with big personalities, including Buster the Very Shy Dog, the subject of her series of children’s books.

Please Don’t Bury Me Alive! (1976)
The San Antonio barrio in the early 1970s is the setting for writer, director and star Efraín Gutiérrez’s independent piece, considered by historians to be the first Chicano feature film. A self-taught filmmaker, Gutiérrez not only created the film from top to bottom on a shoestring, he also acted as its initial distributor and chief promoter, negotiating bookings throughout the Southwest where it filled theaters in Chicano neighborhoods. He tells his story in the turbulent days near the end of the Vietnam War, as a young Chicano man questioning his and his people’s place in society as thousands of his Latino brethren return from the war in coffins. Chon Noriega, director of the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center, wrote, "The film is important as an instance of regional filmmaking, as a bicultural and bilingual narrative, and as a precedent that expanded the way that films got made. ..." Cultural historians often compare Gutiérrez to Oscar Micheaux, the pioneering African-American filmmaker who came to prominence in the 1920s.

The Power and the Glory (1933)
Preston Sturges’ first original screenplay, The Power and the Glory, is a haunting tragedy in sharp contrast to the comedies of the 1940s that established him as one of America’s foremost writer-directors. Contrary to common practice of the time, Sturges wrote the film as a complete shooting script, which producer Jesse L. Lasky, believing it "the most perfect script I’d ever seen," ordered director William K. Howard to film as written. Compared favorably to novels by Henry James and Joseph Conrad for its extensive mix of narration with dramatic action (Fox Studios coined the word "narratage" to publicize Sturges’ innovative technique), The Power and the Glory introduced a non-chronological structure to mainstream movies that was said to influence Citizen Kane. Like that film, The Power and the Glory presents a fragmented rags-to-riches tale of an American industrial magnate that begins with his death, in this case a suicide, and sensitively proceeds to produce a deeply affecting, morally ambivalent portrayal. The Nation magazine called Spencer Tracy’s performance in the lead role ">one of the fullest characterizations ever achieved on screen."

Rio Bravo (1959)
As legend goes, this Western, directed by Howard Hawks, was produced in part as a riposte to Fred Zinnemann’s High Noon. The film trades in the wide-open spaces for the confines of a small jail where a sheriff and his deputies are waiting for the transfer of a prisoner and the anticipated attempt by his equally unlawful brother to break the prisoner out. John Wayne stars as sheriff John T. Chance and is aided in his efforts to keep the law by Walter Brennan, Dean Martin and Ricky Nelson. Angie Dickinson is the love interest and Western regulars Claude Akins, Ward Bond and Pedro Gonzalez are also featured. A smart Western where gunplay is matched by wordplay, Rio Bravo is a terrific ensemble piece and director Hawks’ last great film.

Rosemary’s Baby (1968)
With Rosemary’s Baby, writer-director Roman Polanski brought his expressive European style of psychological filmmaking to an intricately plotted, best-selling American novel by Ira Levin, and created a masterpiece of the horror-film genre. Set in the sprawling Dakota apartment building on New York’s Central Park West, the film conveys an increasing sense of unease, claustrophobia and paranoia as the central character, convincingly played by Mia Farrow in her first starring role, comes to believe that a cult of witches in the building is implementing a plot against her and her unborn child. The supporting cast that Polanski assembled—John Cassavetes as Rosemary’s husband, Ruth Gordon and Sidney Blackmer as their neighbors, and Ralph Bellamy as her doctor—portray believably banal New Yorkers who gain nearly total control over Rosemary’s daily life during her pregnancy. Insistent that "a thread of deliberate ambiguity runs throughout the film," Polanski maintains that the film’s denouement can be understood in more than one way.

Ruggles of Red Gap (1935)
Charles Laughton, known for such serious roles as Nero, King Henry XIII and later as the 1935 Captain Bligh, takes on comedy in this tale of an English manservant won in a poker game by American Charlie Ruggles, a member of Red Gap, Washington’s extremely small social elite. Laughton, in understated valet fashion, worriedly responds: "North America, my lord. Quite an untamed country I understand." However, once in America, he finds not uncouth backwoodsmen, but rather a more egalitarian society that soon has Laughton reciting the Gettysburg Address, catching the American spirit and becoming a successful businessman. Aided by comedy stalwarts ZaSu Pitts and Roland Young, Laughton really shows his acting range and pulls off comedy perfectly. It didn’t hurt that Leo McCarey, who had just worked with W.C. Fields and would next guide Harold Lloyd, was in the director’s chair. McCarey, who could pull heartstrings or touch funny bones with equal skill, started his long directorial career working with such comedy icons as Laurel & Hardy and created several beloved American films.

Saving Private Ryan (1998)
Through the years, Hollywood’s take on war, honor and heroism has taken many conflicting forms. Saving Private Ryan drops ordinary soldiers into a near-impossible rescue mission set amid the carnage of World War II’s Omaha Beach landing. The film’s beginning scenes vividly show us "war is hell," as William T. Sherman said. Spielberg conveyed ultra-realism with harrowing intensity. "Omaha Beach was actually an ‘X’ setting," says Spielberg, "even worse than ‘NC-17,’ and I just kind of feel that (I had) to tell the truth about this war at the end of the century, 54 years later. I wasn’t going to add my film to a long list of pictures that make World War II ‘the glamorous war,’ ‘the romantic war.’"

Shoes (1916)
Renowned silent era writer-director Lois Weber drew on her experiences as a missionary to create Shoes, a masterfully crafted melodrama heightened by Weber’s intent to create, as she noted in an interview, "a slice out of real life." Weber’s camera empathetically documents the suffering her central character, an underpaid shopgirl struggling to support her family, endures daily—standing all day behind a shop counter, walking in winter weather in shoes that provided no protection, stepping on a nail that pierces her flesh. Combining a Progressive era reformer’s zeal to document social problems with a vivid flair for visual storytelling, Weber details Eva’s growing desire for the pair of luxurious shoes she passes each day in a shop window, her self-examination in a cracked mirror after she agrees to go out with a cabaret tout to acquire the shoes, her repugnance as the man puts his hands on her body, and her shame as she breaks down in tears while displaying her newly acquired goods to her mother. The film, which opens with pages from social worker Jane Addams’s sociological study of prostitution, was acclaimed by Variety as "a vision of life as it actually is ... devoid of theatricalism."

State Fair (1933)
For director Henry King to create a film that celebrated an institution as beloved and indomitable as the State Fair, it required the presence of a cherished and steadfast star—in this case, icon, philosopher and America’s favorite cowboy, Will Rogers. Rogers found a superlative vehicle for his homespun persona in this small town slice-of-life setting. He is assisted by Janet Gaynor (already the Academy’s very first best-actress winner), Lew Ayres and Sally Eilers. Enhancing the fair’s festivities, which include the making of mom’s entry for the cook-off and the fattening-up of the family pig, are diverse storylines rich with Americana and romance—some long-lasting and some ephemeral, rife with fun but fleeting as the fair itself. The film’s authenticity owes much to its director, widely known as the King of Americana through films such as Tol’able David, Carousel and Wait till the Sun Shines, Nellie.

Unmasked (1917)
At the time Unmasked was released, Grace Cunard rivaled daredevils Pearl White (The Perils of Pauline) and Helen Holmes (The Hazards of Helen) as America’s Serial Queen. In the film, Cunard is a jewel thief pursuing the same wealthy marks as another thief played by Francis Ford, brother of director John Ford and himself a director and character actor. Cunard, in the mode of many women filmmakers of that era, not only starred in the film, but also wrote its script and parlayed her contributions into a directorial role as well. Produced at Universal Studios, the epicenter of female directors during the silent era, Unmasked reflected a style associated with European filmmakers of the time: artful and sophisticated cinematography comprised of complex camera movements and contrasting depths of field. With a plot rich in female initiative and problem-solving, Cunard fashioned a strong character who does not fit the image of traditional womanhood: she relishes her heists, performs unladylike physical exploits, manipulates court evidence, carries on with a man who is not her husband and yet survives the film without punishment. In essence, the character Cunard created echoed the woman behind the camera. Today, Unmasked serves as a succinct but illustrative example of the role of women in film history, as depicted in fact and fiction.

V-E +1 (1945)
The silent 16 mm footage that makes up V-E +1 documents the burial of beaten and emaciated Holocaust victims found by Allied forces in the Nazi concentration camp at Falkenau, Czechoslovakia, as World War II ended in Europe. According to Samuel Fuller, who shot the footage while in the infantry unit that liberated the camp, the American commander in charge ordered leading civilians of the town who denied knowledge of the death camp to "prepare the bodies for a decent funeral," parade them on wagons through the town, and bury them with dignity in the town’s cemetery. Fuller later became an acclaimed maverick writer-director known for crafting films that entertained, but nevertheless forced audiences to confront challenging societal issues. After making The Big Red One, a fictionalized version of his war experiences that included scenes set in Falkenau, Fuller unearthed his V-E + 1 footage and returned to Falkenau to comment on the experience for the French documentary Falkenau: The Impossible Years.

The Way of Peace (1947)
Frank Tashlin, best known for making comedies with pop icons like Jerry Lewis or Jayne Mansfield, directed this 18-minute puppet film sponsored by the American Lutheran Church. Punctuated with stories from the Bible, the film’s purpose was to reinforce Christian values in the atomic age by condemning the consequences of human conflict with scenes of the crucifixion, lynching and Nazi fascism. Wah Ming Chang, a visual- effects artist who specialized in designing fantastic models, characters and props, created the puppets for the stop-motion animation and also produced the film, which reportedly took 20 months to complete. The film is narrated by actor Lew Ayres, who starred in the anti-war film All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). He was so influenced by that experience, that he became a vocal advocate for peace and famously declared himself a conscientious objector during World War II. The Reverend H. K. Rasbach, a frequent adviser on big-budget films such as The Ten Commandments and The Greatest Story Ever Told, provided technical supervision and story concept. The film premiered at Constitution Hall in Washington D.C., with more than 2,700 in attendance, including members of Congress, representatives of the Supreme Court and 750 leaders from various branches of government.

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971)
Author Roald Dahl adapted his own novel, Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley wrote a memorable musical score, and producer David Wolper wisely cast Gene Wilder as Wonka in this film musical about a contest put on by an often-sadistic candymaker. Harkening back to the classic Hollywood musicals, Willy Wonka is surreal, yet playful at the same time, and suffused with Harper Goff’s jaw-dropping color sets, which richly live up to the fanciful world found in one of the film’s signature songs, Pure Imagination. Wilder’s brilliant portrayal of the enigmatic Wonka caused theatergoers to like and fear Wonka at the same time, while the hallucinogenic tunnel sequence has traumatized children (and adults) for decades, their nightmares indelibly emblazoned in memory like the scariest scenes from The Wizard of Oz.


Films Selected for the 2014 National Film Registry

13 Lakes (2004)
Bert Williams Lime Kiln Club Field Day (1913)
The Big Lebowski (1998)
Down Argentine Way (1940)
The Dragon Painter (1919)
Felicia (1965)
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)
The Gang’s All Here (1943)
House of Wax (1953)
Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport (2000)
Little Big Man (1970)
Luxo Jr. (1986)
Moon Breath Beat (1980)
Please Don’t Bury Me Alive! (1976)
The Power and the Glory (1933)
Rio Bravo (1959)
Rosemary’s Baby (1968)
Ruggles of Red Gap (1935)
Saving Private Ryan (1998)
Shoes (1916)
State Fair (1933)
Unmasked (1917)
V-E + 1 (1945)
The Way of Peace (1947)
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971)

Call for submissions: Shaw Media Diverse Voices Program for emerging documentary filmmakers

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Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival and Shaw Media are pleased to announce the Shaw Media Diverse Voices Program, which will provide six to eight emerging Canadian filmmakers of diverse backgrounds with training in documentary and factual television production. Taking place during the 2015 Hot Docs Festival, the program will guide participants through an intensive training module and seminar series, career management workshops, and networking events with industry professionals. The Shaw Media Diverse Voices Program will focus on documentary and factual television production and show running, including proposal preparation, the production cycle, financing, co-production, and access to broadcasters.

“Representation of diverse voices in the documentary and television production industries is a vitally important issue for Hot Docs and our community,” said Elizabeth Radshaw, Hot Docs Industry Programs Director. “With Shaw Media’s generous support, this program will help develop core skills of producing and filmmaking.”

“We are very pleased to be partnering with Hot Docs this year, and excited to launch a brand new training program for emerging filmmakers across Canada aimed at truly making a difference in our industry,” said Christine Shipton, Senior Vice President of Content at Shaw Media. “The goal is to foster a new generation of diverse Canadian documentary and factual filmmakers, and we believe the Shaw Media Diverse Voices Program will do just that.”

Applications for the Shaw Media Diverse Voices Program will open December 19, 2014, with a final deadline of January 26, 2015. Applicants must reside in Canada on a full-time basis, be between the ages of 22 and 34, and a member of an under-represented group: visible minority, person with a disability or a member of the aboriginal community. For full eligibility and application information, please visit www.hotdocs.ca.


Benefits

  • During the Hot Docs Festival, participate in a bespoke lab and private intensive professional development, career planning, skill development sessions

  • Hot Docs All-Access Pass ($800 value). Pass holders have access to the renowned Hot Docs Forum and Hot Docs Close Up With… sessions, all Festival screenings, Hot Docs parties and social events, and Hot Docs conference sessions, programs and services.

  • Festival workshops on fundamentals, including show running, storytelling, funding and producing, the art of pitching, and promotion and distribution.

  • A customized Hot Docs conference itinerary

  • Access to the Hot Docs Online Community for one year

  • One Hot Docs Program Guide, Industry Guide and delegate bag

  • Free travel and accommodation while in Toronto


  • Eligibility Criteria

  • Must be a member of an under-represented group: visible minority, person with a disability or a member of the aboriginal community

  • Must reside in Canada on a full-time basis

  • Must be an emerging filmmaker with a demonstrated commitment to their profession (e.g. education and/or work experience in the field of documentary or factual television production)

  • Must demonstrate financial need

  • Must be between the ages of 22 and 34

  • Must be able to attend the Hot Docs Festival, April 23 – May 3, 2015


  • Selection Process

    Applications open December 19, 2014, with a final deadline of January 26, 2015.

    Applicants will be notified of the jury’s decision by March 6, 2015.

    http://www.hotdocs.ca/conference/training_programs/shaw_media_diverse_voices_program


    9 Foreign Language Films Advance in Oscar Race

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    Nine features will advance to the next round of voting in the Foreign Language Film category for the 87th Academy Awards®. Eighty-three films had originally been considered in the category.

    Foreign Language Film nominations for 2014 are being determined in two phases.

    The Phase I committee, consisting of several hundred Los Angeles-based Academy members, screened the original submissions in the category between mid-October and December 15. The group’s top six choices, augmented by three additional selections voted by the Academy’s Foreign Language Film Award Executive Committee, constitute the shortlist.

    The shortlist will be winnowed down to the category’s five nominees by specially invited committees in New York, Los Angeles and, for the first time, London. They will spend Friday, January 9, through Sunday, January 11, viewing three films each day and then casting their ballots.

    The 87th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Thursday, January 15, 2015, at 5:30 a.m. PT in the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.

    The Oscars® will be held on Sunday, February 22, 2015, at the Dolby Theatre® at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, and will be televised live by the ABC Television Network. The Oscar presentation also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

    The films, listed in alphabetical order by country, are:

    Argentina, Wild Tales, Damián Szifrón, director

    Estonia, Tangerines, Zaza Urushadze, director

    Georgia, Corn Island, George Ovashvili, director

    Mauritania, Timbuktu, Abderrahmane Sissako, director

    Netherlands, Accused, Paula van der Oest, director

    Poland, Ida, Paweł Pawlikowski, director

    Russia, Leviathan, Andrey Zvyagintsev, director

    Sweden, Force Majeure, Ruben Östlund, director

    Venezuela, The Liberator, Alberto Arvelo, director

    American Cinema Editors announce 65th Annual ACE Eddie Awards – nominations

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    American Cinema Editors (ACE) today announced nominations for the 65th Annual ACE Eddie Awards recognizing outstanding editing in ten categories of film, television and documentaries. Winners will be revealed during ACE’s annual black-tie awards ceremony on Friday, January 30, 2015 in the International Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton Hotel. Next week ACE will announce the Golden Eddie Filmmaker of the Year honoree and two Career Achievement honorees.

    For only the second time in the organization’s history, a tie resulted in an additional nominee in the Best Edited Feature Film (Dramatic) category creating six nominees, instead of five, indicating a tie in the number of votes for the fifth placing films. In 2013, a tie in the Best Edited Animated Feature Film resulted in four nominees, instead of the normal three nominees, in that category.
    The ACE Eddie Award nominees are listed below.

    Final Ballots will be mailed on January 5 and voting ends on January 21. The Blue Ribbon panels where judging for all television categories and the documentary film category take place January 18. Projects in the aforementioned categories are viewed and judged by panels comprised of professional editors (all ACE members). All 700+ ACE members vote during the final balloting of the ACE Eddies, including active members, life members, affiliate members and honorary members.

    The ACE Eddie Awards is considered an integral precursor to the Oscars®. No film has won Best Picture at the Oscars® without also having received at least a Best Editing nomination since “Ordinary People” in 1981. Since the ACE membership has a very high crossover within its membership of Academy® members, it represents an accurate bellwether for the eventual Oscar® outcome.


    NOMINEES FOR 65th ANNUAL ACE EDDIE AWARDS

    BEST EDITED FEATURE FILM (DRAMATIC): TIE!
    American Sniper
    Joel Cox, ACE & Gary Roach, ACE
    Boyhood
    Sandra Adair, ACE
    Gone Girl
    Kirk Baxter, ACE
    The Imitation Game
    William Goldenberg, ACE
    Nightcrawler
    John Gilroy, ACE
    Whiplash
    Tom Cross

    BEST EDITED FEATURE FILM (COMEDY OR MUSICAL):
    Birdman
    Douglas Crise & Stephen Mirrione, ACE
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Fred Raskin, Hughes Winborne, ACE & Craig Wood, ACE
    Into the Woods
    Wyatt Smith
    Inherent Vice
    Leslie Jones, ACE
    Grand Budapest Hotel
    Barney Pilling

    BEST EDITED ANIMATED FEATURE FILM:
    Big Hero 6
    Tim Mertens
    The Boxtrolls
    Edie Ichioka, ACE
    Lego Movie
    David Burrows & Chris McKay

    BEST EDITED DOCUMENTARY (FEATURE):
    Citizenfour
    Mathilde Bonnefoy
    Finding Vivian Maier
    Aaron Wickenden
    Glen Campbell: I’ll Be Me
    Elisa Bonora

    BEST EDITED DOCUMENTARY (TELEVISION):
    Cosmos: A SpaceTime Odyssey: Standing Up in the Milky Way
    John Duffy, ACE, Michael O’Halloran, Eric Lea
    Pauly Shore Stands Alone
    Troy Takaki, ACE & Joey Vigour
    The Roosevelts: An Intimate History: Episode 3 / The Fire of Life
    Erik Ewers

    BEST EDITED HALF-HOUR SERIES FOR TELEVISION:
    Silicon Valley: “Optimal Tip to Tip Efficiency”
    Brian Merken & Tim Roche
    Veep: “Special Relationship”
    Anthony Boys
    Transparent: Pilot
    Catherine Haight

    BEST EDITED ONE-HOUR SERIES FOR COMMERCIAL TELEVISION:
    24: “10pm to 11am”
    Scott Powell, ACE
    Mad Men: “Waterloo”
    Christopher Gay
    Madam Secretary: “Pilot”
    Elena Maganini, ACE & Michael Ornstein, ACE
    Sherlock: “His Last Vow”
    Yan Miles
    The Good Wife: “A Few Words”
    Scott Vickrey, ACE

    BEST EDITED ONE-HOUR SERIES FOR NON-COMMERCIAL TELEVISION:
    True Detective: “Who Goes There”
    Affonso Goncalves
    True Detective: “The Secret Fate of All Life”
    Alex Hall
    House of Cards: “Chapter 14”
    Byron Smith

    BEST EDITED MINISERIES OR MOTION PICTURE FOR TELEVISION:
    Fargo“Buridan’s Ass”
    Regis Kimble
    Olive Kitteridge: “A Different Road”
    Jeffrey M. Werner, ACE
    The Normal Heart
    Adam Penn

    BEST EDITED NON-SCRIPTED SERIES:
    Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown: “Iran”
    Hunter Gross
    Deadliest Catch: “Lost At Sea”
    Josh Earl, ACE & Johnny Bishop
    Vice: “Greenland is Melting & Bonded Labor”
    Joe Langford & Nick Carew

    19th annual Art Directors Guild Excellence In Production Design Awards – nominations

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    Ceremony to Take Place January 31, 2015 at Beverly Hilton Hotel. There is a TIE in the Awards or Events Special Category resulting in six nominees.

    The Art Directors Guild (ADG, IATSE Local 800) today announced nominations in 11 categories of – Production Design for theatrical motion pictures, television, commercials and music videos competing in the Art Directors Guild's 19th Annual Excellence in – Production Design Awards. The nominations were announced by ADG Council Chair Marcia Hinds and Awards co-producers Dave Blass and James Pearse Connelly. The black-tie ceremony revealing winners will take place on Saturday, January 31, 2015, from the International Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills with comedian Owen Benjamin serving as host.

    As previously announced, the recipient of the Guild's prestigious Cinematic Imagery Award will be Academy Award® winner Christopher Nolan, whose film Interstellar is in current release. – Production Designer Jim Bissell, Senior Illustrator Camille Abbott, Senior Set Designer John P. Bruce and Scenic Artist Will Ferrell will be awarded the Guild's Lifetime Achievement Awards. Hall of Fame inductees are John Gabriel Beckman, Charles Lisanby and Walter Tyler.

    The Art Directors Guild (IATSE Local 800) represents 2,300 members who work throughout the United States, Canadaand the rest of the world in film, television and theater as – Production Designers, Art Directors, Assistant Art Directors; Scenic, Title and Graphic Artists; Illustrators and Matte Artists; Set Designers and Model Makers; and Previs Artists. Established in 1937, the ADG's ongoing activities include a Film Society, an annual Awards Banquet, a creative/technology community (5D: The Future of Immersive Design), a bimonthly craft magazine (Perspective); and extensive technology-training programs, figure drawing and other creative workshops and year-round Gallery 800 art exhibitions. The Guild's Online Directory/Website Resource is at www.adg.org.


    NOMINEES FOR EXCELLENCE IN PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A FEATURE FILM IN 2014

    Period Film
    INHERENT VICE– Production Designer: DAVID CRANK
    THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL– Production Designer: ADAM STOCKHAUSEN
    THE IMITATION GAME – Production Designer: MARIA DJURKOVIC
    THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING – Production Designer: JOHN PAUL KELLY
    UNBROKEN – Production Designer: JON HUTMAN

    Fantasy Film
    CAPTAIN AMERICA:THE WINTER SOLDIER – Production Designer: PETER WENHAM
    DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES – Production Designer: JAMES CHINLUND
    GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY – Production Designer: CHARLES WOOD
    INTERSTELLAR – Production Designer: NATHAN CROWLEY
    INTO THE WOODS – Production Designer: DENNIS GASSNER

    Contemporary Film
    AMERICAN SNIPER – Production Designers: JAMES J. MURAKAMI, CHARISSE CARDENAS
    BIRDMAN – Production Designer: KEVIN THOMPSON
    FOXCATCHER – Production Designer: JESS GONCHOR
    GONE GIRL– Production Designer: DONALD GRAHAM BURT
    NIGHTCRAWLER – Production Designer: KEVIN KAVANAUGH

    NOMINEES FOR EXCELLENCE IN PRODUCTION DESIGN IN TELEVISION 2014

    One-Hour Period or Fantasy Single-Camera Television Series
    GAME OF THRONES: "The Laws of Gods and Men,""The Mountain and the Viper"– Production Designer: DEBORAH RILEY
    MAD MEN:"Time Zones"– Production Designer: DAN BISHOP
    GOTHAM:"Pilot,""Selina Kyle,""Arkham"– Production Designer: DOUG KRANER
    THE KNICK:"Method and Madness,""Working Late a Lot"– Production Designer: HOWARD CUMMINGS
    BOARDWALK EMPIRE: "Golden Days for Boys and Girls"– Production Designer: BILL GROOM

    One-Hour Contemporary Single-Camera Television Series
    HOMELAND:"The Drone Queen"– Production Designer: JOHN D. KRETSCHMER
    HOUSE OF CARDS:"Chapter 18"– Production Designer: STEVE ARNOLD
    JUSTIFIED:"Murder Of Crowes,""Wrong Roads,""The Toll"– Production Designer: DAVE BLASS
    THE NEWSROOM:"Boston,""Main Justice,""Contempt"– Production Designer: KAREN STEWARD
    TRUE DETECTIVE: "The Locked Room,""Form and Void"– Production Designer: ALEX DiGERLANDO

    Television Movie or Mini-Series
    AMERICAN HORROR STORY: FREAK SHOW: "Massacres and Matinees"– Production Designer: MARK WORTHINGTON
    COSMOS: A SPACETIME ODYSSEY: "Unafraid of the Dark"– Production Designer: SETH REED
    FARGO: "The Crocodiles Dilemma"– Production Designer: JOHN BLACKIE
    HOUDINI: "Part I,""Part II"– Production Designer: PATRIZIA VON BRANDENSTEIN
    SHERLOCK: "His Last Vow"– Production Designer: ARWEL W. JONES

    Half Hour Single-Camera Television Series
    CALIFORNICATION: "Faith, Hope, Love,""Like Father Like Son,""Kickoff"– Production Designer: RAY YAMAGATA
    HOUSE OF LIES: "Wreckage,""Middlegame,""Zha- Moreng"– Production Designer: RAY YAMAGATA
    MODERN FAMILY: "Halloween 3: Awesomeland,""Marco Polo,""Won't You Be Our Neighbor"– Production Designer: CLAIRE BENNETT
    SILICON VALLEY: "Articles of Incorporation,""Signaling Risk,""Optimal Tip-To-Tip Efficiency"– Production Designer: RICHARD TOYON
    VEEP: "Clovis,""Special Relationship,""Debate"– Production Designer: JAMES GLOSTER

    Multi-Camera Television Series
    HOW I MET YOUR MOTHER: "How Your Mother Met Me"– Production Designer: STEPHAN OLSON
    MIKE & MOLLY: "Mike & Molly's Excellent Adventure,""The Dice Lady Cometh"– Production Designer: JOHN SHAFFNER
    THE BIG BANG THEORY: "The Locomotive Manipulation,""The Convention Conundrum,""The Status Quo Combustion"– Production Designer: JOHN SHAFFNER
    THE MILLERS: "You Are the Wind Beneath My Wings, Man,""Con-Troversy,""Papa Was a Rolling Bone"– Production Designer: GLENDA ROVELLO
    UNDATABLE: "Pilot"– Production Designer: CABOT McMULLEN

    Awards or Event Special
    86th ANNUAL ACADEMY AWARDS – Production Designer: DEREK McLANE
    PETER PAN LIVE! – Production Designer: DEREK McLANE
    SUPER BOWL XLVIII HALFTIME SHOW: STARRING BRUNO MARS – Production Designer: BRUCE RODGERS
    THE AMERICAN MUSIC AWARDS 2014 – Production Designer: JOE STEWART
    THE NIGHT THAT CHANGED AMERICA:A GRAMMY SALUTE TO THE BEATLES – Production Designer: MATTHEW RUSSELL
    THE 66th PRIMETIME EMMY AWARDS – Production Designer: KEITH IAN RAYWOOD

    Short Format: WebSeries, Music Video or Commercial
    APPLE: "Perspective"– Production Designer: SEAN HARGREAVES
    COLDPLAY: "Magic"– Production Designer: EMMA FAIRLEY
    IKEA: "Carousel"– Production Designer: RICHARD LASSALLE
    KATY PERRY: "Dark Horse"– Production Designer: JEREMY REED
    SIMPSON'S MARATHON – Production Designer: ZACH MATHEWS

    Variety, Competition, Reality, or Game Show Series
    KEY & PEELE: "Halloween Episode,""Alien Imposters"– Production Designer:GARY KORDAN
    PORTLANDIA: "Celery"– Production Designer:TYLER B. ROBINSON
    SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE: "Louis C. K. with Sam Smith,""Anna Kendrick with Pharrell Williams,""Chris Rockwith Prince"– Production Designers:KEITH IAN RAYWOOD, EUGENE LEE, AKIRA YOSHIMURA, N. JOSEPH DeTULLIO
    THE TONIGHT SHOW STARRING JIMMY FALLON: "1,""45,""56"– Production Designers:EUGENE LEE, PETER BARAN
    THE VOICE: "Blind Auditions Premiere"– Production Designers:JAMES PEARSE CONNELLY, ANTON GOSS

    26th annual Producers Guild Awards – nominations announced

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    The Producers Guild of America (PGA) announced today the motion picture and long-form television nominations for the 26th Annual Producers Guild Awards. The categories include: The Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures; The Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures; and The David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television. The feature documentary film category and other television category nominations were previously announced by the PGA in late 2014.

    All 2015 Producers Guild Award winners will be announced on January 24th at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles. This year, the Producers Guild will present special honors to Jon Feltheimer (Milestone Award), Mark Gordon (Norman Lear Achievement Award in Television), Gale Anne Hurd (David O. Selznick Achievement Award in Theatrical Motion Pictures), the HBO television motion picture THE NORMAL HEART (Stanley Kramer Award), and production company Plan B Entertainment (Visionary Award).

    The Producers Guild Awards Co-Chairs are Todd Black (THE PURSUIT OF HAPPYNESS, THE EQUALIZER) and Ryan Murphy (American Horror Story, Glee). Sponsors of the 2015 Producers Guild Awards include Cadillac, the Official Automotive Partner of the PGA; PRG, Production Resource Group, a PGA annual sponsor; Delta Air Lines, sponsor of the Visionary Award; and Univision Communications, Inc. sponsor of the evening’s cocktail reception.

    The 2015 Producers Guild nominated films and television programs are listed below in alphabetical order by category, along with producers. The producers’ names for each nominated production are listed in alphabetical order and are not necessarily the proper order of credits.


    The theatrical motion picture nominees are:

    The Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures
    American Sniper (Warner Bros. Pictures) Producers: Bradley Cooper, p.g.a., Clint Eastwood, p.g.a., Andrew Lazar, p.g.a., Robert Lorenz, p.g.a., Peter Morgan, p.g.a.
    Birdman (Fox Searchlight Pictures) Producers: Alejandro G. Iñárritu, John Lesher, James W. Skotchdopole
    Boyhood (IFC Films) Producers: Richard Linklater, p.g.a., Cathleen Sutherland, p.g.a.
    Foxcatcher (Sony Pictures Classics) Producers: Megan Ellison, p.g.a., Jon Kilik, p.g.a., Bennett Miller, p.g.a.
    Gone Girl (20th Century Fox) Producer: Ceán Chaffin, p.g.a.
    The Grand Budapest Hotel (Fox Searchlight Pictures) Producers: Wes Anderson & Scott Rudin, Jeremy Dawson, Steven Rales
    The Imitation Game (The Weinstein Company) Producers: Nora Grossman, p.g.a., Ido Ostrowsky, p.g.a., Teddy Schwarzman, p.g.a.
    Nightcrawler (Open Road Films) Producers: Jennifer Fox, Tony Gilroy
    The Theory of Everything (Focus Features) Producers: Tim Bevan & Eric Fellner, Lisa Bruce, Anthony McCarten
    Whiplash (Sony Pictures Classics) Producers: Jason Blum, Helen Estabrook, David Lancaster

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures
    Big Hero 6 (Walt Disney Animation Studios) Producer: Roy Conli, p.g.a.
    The Book of Life (20th Century Fox) Producers: Brad Booker, p.g.a., Guillermo del Toro, p.g.a.
    The Boxtrolls (Focus Features) Producers: David Bleiman Ichioka, p.g.a., Travis Knight, p.g.a.
    How To Train Your Dragon 2 (20th Century Fox) Producer: Bonnie Arnold, p.g.a.
    The LEGO Movie (Warner Bros. Pictures) Producer: Dan Lin

    The television nominees are:

    The David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television
    The Long-Form Television category encompasses both movies of the week and mini-series.
    American Horror Story: Freak Show (FX) Producers: Brad Buecker, Dante Di Loreto, Brad Falchuk, Joseph Incaprera, Alexis Martin Woodall, Tim Minear, Ryan Murphy, Jennifer Salt, James Wong
    Fargo (FX) Producers: Adam Bernstein, John Cameron, Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, Michael Frislev, Noah Hawley, Warren Littlefield, Chad Oakes, Kim Todd
    The Normal Heart (HBO) Producers: Jason Blum, Dante Di Loreto, Scott Ferguson, Dede Gardner, Alexis Martin Woodall, Ryan Murphy, Brad Pitt, Mark Ruffalo
    The Roosevelts: An Intimate History (PBS) Producers: To Be Determined
    Sherlock (PBS) Producers: Mark Gatiss, Steven Moffat, Beryl Vertue, Sue Vertue

    In late 2014, the Producers Guild of America announced the Documentary Theatrical Motion Picture, Television Series and Non-Fiction Television Nominations. The following list now includes complete producer credits.

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures
    The Green Prince (Music Box Films) Producers: John Battsek, Simon Chinn, Nadav Schirman
    Life Itself (Magnolia Pictures) Producers: Garrett Basch, Steve James, Zak Piper
    Merchants of Doubt (Sony Pictures Classics) Producers: Robert Kenner, Melissa Robledo
    Particle Fever (Abramorama/BOND 360) Producers: David E. Kaplan, Mark A. Levinson, Andrea Miller, Carla Solomon
    Virunga (Netflix) Producers: Joanna Natasegara, Orlando von Einsiedel

    The Norman Felton Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Drama
    Breaking Bad (AMC) Producers: Melissa Bernstein, Sam Catlin, Bryan Cranston, Vince Gilligan, Peter Gould, Mark Johnson, Stewart Lyons, Michelle MacLaren, George Mastras, Diane Mercer, Thomas Schnauz, Moira Walley-Beckett
    Downton Abbey (PBS) Producers: Julian Fellowes, Nigel Marchant, Gareth Neame, Liz Trubridge
    Game Of Thrones (HBO) Producers: David Benioff, Bernadette Caulfield, Frank Doelger, Chris Newman, Greg Spence, Carolyn Strauss, D.B. Weiss
    House Of Cards (Netflix) Producers: Dana Brunetti, Joshua Donen, David Fincher, David Manson, Iain Paterson, Eric Roth, Kevin Spacey, Beau Willimon
    True Detective (HBO) Producers: Richard Brown, Carol Cuddy, Steve Golin, Woody Harrelson, Cary Joji Fukunaga, Matthew McConaughey, Nic Pizzolatto, Scott Stephens

    The Danny Thomas Award for Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Comedy
    The Big Bang Theory (CBS) Producers: Faye Oshima Belyeu, Chuck Lorre, Steve Molaro, Bill Prady
    Louie (FX) Producers: Pamela Adlon, Dave Becky, M. Blair Breard, Louis C.K., Vernon Chatman, Adam Escott, Steven Wright
    Modern Family (ABC) Producers: Paul Corrigan, Megan Ganz, Abraham Higginbotham, Ben Karlin, Elaine Ko, Steven Levitan, Christopher Lloyd, Jeff Morton, Dan O’Shannon, Jeffrey Richman, Chris Smirnoff, Brad Walsh, Bill Wrubel, Sally Young, Danny Zuker
    Orange Is The New Black (Netflix) Producers: Mark A. Burley, Sara Hess, Jenji Kohan, Gary Lennon, Neri Tannenbaum, Michael Trim, Lisa I. Vinnecour
    Veep (HBO) Producers: Chris Addison, Simon Blackwell, Christopher Godsick, Armando Iannucci, Stephanie Laing, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Frank Rich, Tony Roche

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Non-Fiction Television
    30 For 30 (ESPN) Producers: Andy Billman, John Dahl, Erin Leyden, Connor Schell, Bill Simmons
    American Masters (PBS) Producers: Susan Lacy, Julie Sacks, Junko Tsunashima
    Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown (CNN) Producers: Anthony Bourdain, Christopher Collins, Lydia Tenaglia, Sandra Zweig
    COSMOS: A SpaceTime Odyssey (FOX/NatGeo) Producers: Brannon Braga, Mitchell Cannold, Jason Clark, Ann Druyan, Livia Hanich, Steve Holtzman, Seth MacFarlane
    Shark Tank (ABC) Producers: Becky Blitz, Mark Burnett, Bill Gaudsmith, Phil Gurin, Yun Lingner, Clay Newbill, Jim Roush, Laura Roush, Max Swedlow

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Competition Television
    The Amazing Race (CBS) Producers: Jerry Bruckheimer, Elise Doganieri, Jonathan Littman, Bertram van Munster, Mark Vertullo
    Dancing With The Stars (ABC) Producers: Ashley Edens Shaffer, Conrad Green, Joe Sungkur
    Project Runway (Lifetime) Producers: Jane Cha Cutler, Desiree Gruber, Tim Gunn, Heidi Klum, Jonathan Murray, Sara Rea, Teri Weideman
    Top Chef (Bravo) Producers: Doneen Arquines, Daniel Cutforth, Casey Kriley, Jane Lipsitz, Hillary Olsen, Erica Ross, Tara Siener, Shealan Spencer
    The Voice (NBC) Producers: Stijn Bakkers, Mark Burnett, John De Mol, Chad Hines, Lee Metzger, Audrey Morrissey, Jim Roush, Kyra Thompson, Mike Yurchuk, Amanda Zucker

    The Award for Outstanding Producer of Live Entertainment & Talk Television
    The Colbert Report (Comedy Central) Producers: Meredith Bennett, Tanya Michnevich Bracco, Stephen Colbert, Richard Dahm, Paul Dinello, Barry Julien, Matt Lappin, Emily Lazar, Tom Purcell, Jon Stewart
    Jimmy Kimmel Live (ABC) Producers: David Craig, Ken Crosby, Doug DeLuca, Gary Greenberg, Erin Irwin, Jimmy Kimmel, Jill Leiderman, Molly McNearney, Tony Romero, Jason Schrift, Jennifer Sharron, Seth Weidner, Josh Weintraub
    Last Week Tonight With John Oliver (HBO) Producers: Tim Carvell, John Oliver, Liz Stanton
    Real Time With Bill Maher (HBO) Producers: Scott Carter, Sheila Griffiths, Marc Gurvitz, Dean Johnsen, Bill Maher, Billy Martin, Matt Wood
    The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon (NBC) Producers: Rob Crabbe, Jamie Granet Bederman, Katie Hockmeyer, Jim Juvonen, Josh Lieb, Brian McDonald, Lorne Michaels, Gavin Purcell

    The following programs were previously announced in late 2014. They were not vetted for producer eligibility this year, but winners in these categories will be announced at the official ceremony on January 24th:

    The Award for Outstanding Sports Program
    24/7 (HBO)
    Hard Knocks: Training Camp With The Atlanta Falcons (HBO)
    Hard Knocks: Training Camp With The Cincinnati Bengals (HBO)
    Inside: U.S. Soccer’s March To Brazil (ESPN)
    Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel (HBO)

    The Award for Outstanding Children’s Program
    Dora The Explorer (Nickelodeon)
    Sesame Street (PBS)
    Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Nickelodeon)
    Toy Story OF TERROR! (ABC)
    Wynton Marsalis: A YoungArts Masterclass (HBO)

    The Award for Outstanding Digital Series
    30 For 30 Shorts (http://espn.go.com/30for30/shorts)
    Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee (http://www.crackle.com/c/comedians-in-cars-getting-coffee)
    COSMOS: A National Geographic Deeper Dive (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AkiFfAEB5M8)
    Epic Rap Battles Of History (http://youtube.com/erb)
    Video Game High School Season 3 (https://www.youtube.com/user/freddiew)

    About the Producers Guild of America (PGA)
    The Producers Guild of America is the non-profit trade group that represents, protects and promotes the interests of all members of the producing team in film, television and new media. The Producers Guild has more than 6,700 members who work together to protect and improve their careers, the industry and community by providing members with employment opportunities, seeking to expand health benefits, promoting fair and impartial standards for the awarding of producing credits, as well as other education and advocacy efforts such as encouraging sustainable production practices. For more information and the latest updates, please visit Producers Guild of America websites and follow on social media:

    Websites: www.producersguild.org, www.pgagreen.org, www.pgadiversity.org
    Twitter: @ProducersGuild
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/pga
    Youtube: www.youtube.com/producersguild
    Instagram: www.instagram.com/producersguild
    Hashtag: #pgaawards


    TIFF wins first Academy Legacy Award

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    To honour its 40th anniversary, the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) will receive the first Academy Legacy Award - for unyielding dedication in bringing international acclaim to Canadian talent in film, television or digital media - it was announced today by Helga Stephenson, CEO, Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television.

    "TIFF put Canada on the world stage. It brought Canadian cinema into the international spotlight. It established Toronto as a key date on the festival circuit for players around the globe. The Academy salutes TIFF for its resolute commitment to Canadian cinema," says Stephenson.

    The inaugural Academy Legacy Award, a Canadian Screen Award, will be presented at CANADA STARS IN AWARDS SEASON, a red carpet event at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills (February 19, 2015), to celebrate excellence of Canada's talent in the film and television industry, co-hosted by the Academy, Telefilm Canada and the Consulate General of Canada in Los Angeles.

    "TIFF's commitment to showcasing Canadian cinema, to both Canadians and the world, has played an important role in promoting homegrown talent and success stories," says Carolle Brabant, Telefilm Canada Executive Director. "TIFF is most deserving of this newly minted Academy Legacy Award, and the CANADA STARS IN AWARDS SEASON event in Los Angeles is a most fitting event to spotlight the contribution of our talent in front of and behind the camera," she adds.

    "We are so pleased to receive this inaugural award from the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television, said Piers Handling, Director and CEO, TIFF. "TIFF's mandate is to champion Canadian cinema at home and abroad and to inspire Canadian talent to become tomorrow's leaders in the industry. We're thrilled to be recognized for our efforts."

    Consul General James Villeneuve will also attend CANADA STARS IN AWARDS SEASON and the inaugural presentation of the Academy Legacy Award to TIFF.

    www.academy.ca

    Toronto Film Critics Association names Denis Villeneuve’s Enemy the Best Canadian Film of the Year

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    Enemy, starring Jake Gyllenhaal as a Toronto college professor whose world is thrown into chaos when he becomes obsessed with a lookalike actor, has won the Toronto Film Critics Association’s 2014 Rogers Best Canadian Film Award.

    The award was presented to director Denis Villeneuveby Deepa Mehta at a gala dinner held January 6, 2015 at the historic Carlu in downtown Toronto. Also nominated for the award were The F Word, directed by Michael Dowse, and Mommy, directed by Xavier Dolan. In attendance were prominent members of the film industry.

    This is the third time Villeneuve has taken home the Rogers Best Canadian Film Award, having previously won in consecutive years for 2009’s Polytechnique and 2010’s Incendies. The $100,000 value of the Rogers Best Canadian Film Award makes it the richest annual film prize in Canada. As runners-up, Dolan and Dowse each received $5,000 from Rogers Communications.

    “All three Canadian finalists are Montreal directors, but their films could not be more different,” said TFCA President Brian D. Johnson. “With Enemy, Denis Villeneuve ventured onto David Cronenberg’s home turf and took no prisoners. By embracing this nervy psychodrama, our critics have plucked a dark gem from art-house obscurity and held it up to the light.”

    “This award is a hat trick for Denis Villeneuve,” said Phil Lind, Vice Chairman, Rogers Communications Inc. “As one of this country’s most talented directors, Denis Villeneuve’s Enemy is another cinematic triumph. We’re thrilled to again acknowledge Canadian film excellence with this award.”

    The evening’s host, TIFF Artistic Director Cameron Bailey, introduced a videotaped acceptance speech from filmmaker Richard Linklater, whose remarkable character drama Boyhood took the TFCA’s 2014 awards for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Supporting Actress (Patricia Arquette).

    The Master’s Katie Boland and The F Word’s Tommie-Amber Pirie presented letters and videotaped acceptances from Best Supporting Actor winner J.K. Simmons (Whiplash), Best First Feature director Ritesh Batra (The Lunchbox) and Best Foreign-Language Film director Ruben Östlund (Force Majeure).

    Tony-winning writer and actor Bob Martin presented the Manulife Best Student Film Award to Eui Yong Zong for Leftover, a drama about a North Korean family’s experiences as refugees in Toronto. The award carries a cash prize of $5,000, donated by Manulife to celebrate the spirit of volunteerism that is at the heart of student film-making and the power of storytelling in inspiring active citizenship. Manulife’s Martha Hancock, AVP Philanthropy and Sponsorships, Branding and Communications presented Zong with the cheque.

    As previously announced, Piers Handling is winner of the Technicolor Clyde Gilmour Award, which was presented at the event by Wayne Clarkson and Grace Carnale-Davis, Vice-President, Sales & Client Service – Technicolor Toronto. Under the pay-it-forward terms of the award, Technicolor donated $50,000 in services to a filmmaker of Handling’s choosing—Randall Okita, whose The Weatherman and the Shadowboxerwas named Best Canadian Short at TIFF last September.

    Albert Shin, whose feature debut In Her Placeexplores social mores in South Korea, received a cheque for $5,000 from Scotiabank as the winner of this year’s Scotiabank Jay Scott Prize for an emerging artist. The prize was presented to Shin by Patricia Rozema and Rick White, Head of Marketing, Scotiabank Global Wealth and Insurance.

    Jesse Moss was presented with a cheque for $5,000 by Jennifer Baichwal, Edward Burtynsky and Joe Fresh’s President and Creative Director Joe Mimran. Moss is the director of the American sociological study The Overnighters, winner of this year’s Joe Fresh Allan King Documentary Award.

    The TFCA is extremely grateful to founding sponsor Rogers Communications Inc. and welcomes new sponsor Joe Fresh. Thanks to returning sponsors Manulife, Scotiabank, Cineplex Entertainment, Technicolor Creative Services, Maclean’s Magazine, the Globe and Mail, Moët & Chandon, Shangri-La Hotel Toronto, The Carlu, North 44, MacLaren Craft and Ontario Media Development Corporation.

    Previously announced winners for the 2014 TFCA Awards

    Casting Society of America's 30th Annual Artios Awards – nominations

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    The Casting Society of America (CSA) has unveiled its feature film nominees for the 30th Annual Artios Awards. Final film ballots have been distributed and votes can be entered at http://www.castingsociety.com/, through Monday, January 12th. All winners for film, television, theater and new media categories will be announced at the 30th Annual Artios Awards on January 22, 2015, during the height of awards season, with award ceremonies to be held simultaneously at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles (reception will commence at 6:00 p.m. PT) and at 42WEST (formerly XL Nightclub), Cabaret & Lounge (514 West 42nd Street) in New York (reception will commence at 6:00 p.m. ET).

    The bicoastal awards show will be hosted by Patton Oswalt (Los Angeles) and Michael Urie (New York City). The evening will also honor two-time Academy Award®-nominee Richard Linklater (Boyhood) with the Career Achievement Award; Academy Award®-nominated and Emmy Award®-winning director Rob Marshall (Into the Woods) with the New York Apple Award; and Emmy Award®-winning casting director Ellen Lewis with the Hoyt Bowers Award.

    Francine Maisler leads the film contenders with four nominations for her work in casting: Into the Woods, Birdman, 12 Years a Slave and Captain Phillips. Due to the Artios Awards date change this year, the eligibility period for film projects was expanded for this award ceremony only, to include films released theatrically from July 1, 2013 through December 31, 2014.

    Across all categories, James Calleri leads with eight nominations (theater categories), followed by Bernard Telsey (television, theater and film categories) and Daniel Swee (theater categories) with seven nominations each.

    Feature film nominees announced today include:

    Big Budget Comedy
    Guardians of the Galaxy– Sarah Finn, Reg Poerscout-Edgerton, Tamara Hunter (Associate)
    Into The Woods– Francine Maisler, Bernard Telsey, Tiffany Little Canfield
    The Secret Life of Walter Mitty– Rachel Tenner, Charlene Lee (Associate), Bess Fifer (Associate)
    This is Where I Leave You– Cindy Tolan, Adam Caldwell (Associate)
    We’re the Millers– Lisa Beach, Sarah Katzman, Lisa Mae Fincannon (Location Casting), Jeremy Gordon (Associate), Beth Lipari (Associate), Dana Salerno (Associate)
    The Wolf of Wall Street– Ellen Lewis

    Big Budget Drama
    12 Years a Slave– Francine Maisler, Meagan Lewis (Location Casting), Melissa Kostenbauder (Associate)
    American Hustle– Mary Vernieu, Lindsay Graham, Angela Peri (Location Casting)
    Captain Phillips– Francine Maisler, Donna M. Belajac (Location Casting)
    Foxcatcher– Jeanne McCarthy, Rori Bergman (Location Casting), Donna M. Belajac (Location Casting), Matthew Maisto (Associate)
    Gone Girl– Laray Mayfield, Annie Hamilton (Location Casting)
    Selma– Aisha Coley, Robyn Owen (Associate)

    Studio or Independent Comedy
    Big Eyes– Jeanne McCarthy, Nicole Abellera, Coreen Mayrs (Location Casting), Heike Brandstatter (Location Casting)
    Chef– Sarah Finn, Tamara Hunter (Associate)
    The Grand Budapest Hotel– Douglas Aibel, Jina Jay, Henry Russell Bergstein (Associate)
    Pride– Fiona Weir
    St. Vincent– Laura Rosenthal
    Top Five– Victoria Thomas, Matthew Maisto (Associate)

    Studio or Independent Drama
    Birdman– Francine Maisler
    Blue Jasmine– Juliet Taylor, Patricia DiCerto, Nina Henninger (Location Casting)
    Dallas Buyers Club– Kerry Barden, Paul Schnee, Rich Delia, Tracy Kilpatrick (Location Casting), Allison Estrin (Associate)
    Inside Llewyn Davis– Ellen Chenoweth, Amelia McCarthy (Associate)
    The Theory of Everything– Nina Gold
    Whiplash– Terri Taylor

    Low Budget Comedy
    Adult World– Jennifer Euston
    Believe Me– JC Cantu, Beth Sepko (Location Casting)
    Dear White People– Kim Taylor-Coleman
    The Double– Douglas Aibel, Henry Russell Bergstein (Associate)
    Space Station 76– Eric Souliere
    Two Night Stand– Angela Demo, Julie Schubert (Location Casting)

    Low Budget Drama
    Boyhood– Beth Sepko
    Cake– Mary Vernieu, Lindsay Graham
    Camp X-Ray– Richard Hicks
    Lonely Boy– Howard Meltzer
    Short Term 12– Kerry Barden, Paul Schnee, Rich Delia, Allison Estrin (Associate)
    The Spectacular Now– Angela Demo, Tracy Kilpatrick (Location Casting)

    Animation
    Big Hero 6– Jamie Sparer Roberts
    The Book of Life– Christian Kaplan
    Frozen– Jamie Sparer Roberts
    Monsters University– Kevin Reher, Natalie Lyon
    Planes– Jason Henkel
    Rio 2– Christian Kaplan

    Past Artios Award winners include the casting directors of: Silver Linings Playbook, Argo, The King’s Speech, The Social Network, Girls, Homeland, Modern Family, The Mindy Project, House of Cards, The Book of Mormon and Carousel. Previous attendees and presenters have included critically acclaimed talent, such as: Ben Affleck, Jennifer Garner, J.J. Abrams, Neil Patrick Harris, Jake Gyllenhaal, Chris Pine, Kerry Washington, Jeremy Renner, Diane Lane, Aisha Tyler and Marg Helgenberger. ‘Artios’ is an ancient Greek word meaning ‘perfectly fitted’ and the adjective is always used in the plural form.

    About the Casting Society of America
    The Casting Society of America (CSA) was founded in February of 1982 with the intention of establishing a recognized standard of professionalism in the casting field and providing its members with a support organization to further their goals and protect their common interests. CSA currently boasts more than 600 members. CSA Casting Directors and Associates work around the world, with members based in the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia and Africa. The CSA is a global resource for producers, directors and creative teams seeking casting professionals, while promoting the image of casting directors and associates worldwide, engaging in a number of charitable activities, and supporting its members by sharing important and helpful professional information. For more information on the Casting Society of America, please visit CastingSociety.com.

    17th annual Costume Designers Guild Awards – nominations

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    The Costume Designers Guild has announced the full list of nominations for the 17th annual Costume Designers Guild Awards. Nominees include the costume designers for leading awards seasons contenders such as Boyhood, The Imitation Game, Selma and Into the Woods.

    Producer, director and screenwriter Richard Linklater (who recently collaborated with costume designer Kari Perkins on Boyhood) will receive the Distinguished Collaborator Award in recognition of his support of Costume Design and creative partnerships with Costume Designers. Costume Designer Aggie Guerard Rodgers will be presented with an Honourary Career Achievement Award for her outstanding work in film. The 2015 Edith Head Award for the Advancement of the Art of Costume Design will be presented to costume designer, scholar, and two-term CDG past president, Dr. Deborah Nadoolman Landis, a CDG member and costume design activist for nearly 40 years. The LACOSTE Spotlight Award honouree will be announced in the upcoming weeks.

    The ceremony for the 17th annual Costume Designers Guild Awards will be held on Tuesday, February 17th, 2015 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California.


    Nominations for the 17th Costume Designers Guild Awards

    Excellence in Contemporary Film
    Birdman– Albert Wolsky
    Boyhood– Kari Perkins
    Gone Girl– Trish Summerville
    Interstellar– Mary Zophres
    Wild– Melissa Bruning

    Excellence in Period Film
    The Grand Budapest Hotel– Milena Canonero
    The Imitation Game– Sammy Sheldon Differ
    Inherent Vice– Mark Bridges
    Selma– Ruth E. Carter
    The Theory of Everything– Steven Noble

    Excellence in Fantasy Film
    Guardians of the Galaxy– Alexandra Byrne
    The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies– Bob Buck, Lesley Burkes-Harding, Ann Maskrey
    The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 1– Kurt and Bart
    Into the Woods– Colleen Atwood
    Maleficent– Anna B. Sheppard, Jane Clive

    Outstanding Contemporary Television Series
    House of Cards– Johanna Argan
    Ray Donovan– Christopher Lawrence
    Saturday Night Live– Tom Broecker, Eric Justian
    Scandal– Lyn Paolo
    True Detective– Jenny Eagan

    Outstanding Period/Fantasy Television Series
    Boardwalk Empire– John Dunn
    Game of Thrones– Michele Clapton
    The Knick– Ellen Mirojnick
    Mad Men– Janie Bryant
    Masters of Sex– Ane Crabtree

    Outstanding Made for Television Movie or Mini Series
    American Horror Story: Freak Show– Lou Eyrich
    Houdini– Birgit Hutter
    The Normal Heart– Daniel Orlandi
    Olive Kitteridge– Jenny Eagan
    Sherlock– Sarah Arthur

    Excellence in Commercial Costume Design
    Army ‘Defy Expectations, Villagers’ – Christopher Lawrence
    Direct TV ‘Less Attractive’, with Rob Lowe – Mindy Le Brock, Jessica Albertson
    Dos Equis ‘Most Interesting Man in the World Walks on Fire’ – Julie Vogel
    Kia Soul Hamster Commercial Featuring ‘Animals’ – Anette Cseri
    Smirnoff ‘The Mixologist’ – Laura Jean Shannon






    29th annual American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) Awards – nominations

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    Five directors of photography will vie for the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) Award in the theatrical motion picture category at the organization’s 29th Outstanding Achievement Awards ceremony. “These nominees represent a fabulous slate selected from a particularly rich field of work this year,” says ASC President Richard Crudo. “It’s amazing how these cinematographers have once again redefined the boundaries of what we do.”

    The American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) is a non-profit association dedicated to advancing the art of filmmaking. Since its charter in 1919, the ASC has been committed to educating aspiring filmmakers and others about the art and craft of cinematography. For additional information about the ASC, visit www.theasc.com. Join ASC on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/The.ASC and American Cinematographer magazine fan page at http://www.facebook.com/AmericanCinematographer.

    The nominees are:

    Roger Deakins, ASC, BSC for Unbroken

    Óscar Faura for The Imitation Game

    Emmanuel Lubezki ASC, AMC for Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)

    Dick Pope, BSC for Mr. Turner

    Robert D. Yeoman, ASC for The Grand Budapest Hotel

    The winner will be revealed on February 15 during the annual ASC Awards gala at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles.

    This is Deakins’ 13th ASC nomination. He previously won for Skyfall (2013), The Shawshank Redemption (1995) and The Man Who Wasn’t There (2002). His other nominations include Fargo (1997), Kundun (1998), O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2001), No Country for Old Men (2008), The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2008), Revolutionary Road (2009), The Reader (2009), True Grit (2011) and Prisoners (2014). He was also the recipient of the organization’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011.

    Lubezki won the ASC Award last year for Gravity. He also took home top honors for The Tree of Life (2012) and Children of Men (2007), and was nominated in 2000 for Sleepy Hollow.

    Pope previously earned a nomination for The Illusionist (2007).

    These are the first ASC nominations for Faura and Yeoman.

    For more information regarding the ASC Awards, visit the ASC website at www.theasc.com, or call 323-969-4333.

    2015 Writers Guild Awards Screenplay Nominations Announced

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    The Writers Guild of America, West (WGAW) and the Writers Guild of America, East (WGAE) have announced nominations for outstanding achievement in writing for the screen during 2014. Winners will be honored at the 2015 Writers Guild Awards on Saturday, February 14, 2015, at simultaneous ceremonies in Los Angeles and New York City.

    Feature films eligible for a Writers Guild Award were exhibited theatrically for at least one week in Los Angeles during 2014 and were written under the WGA’s Minimum Basic Agreement (MBA) or under a bona fide collective bargaining agreement of the Writers Guild of Canada, Writers Guild of Great Britain, Irish Playwrights & Screenwriters Guild, or the New Zealand Writers Guild. Theatrical screenplays produced under the jurisdiction of the WGA or an affiliate Guild must have been submitted for Writers Guild Awards consideration.

    Documentaries eligible for a Writers Guild Award featured an onscreen writing credit and were exhibited theatrically in Los Angeles or New York for one week during 2014. Theatrical documentaries must have been produced under the jurisdiction of the WGA or an affiliate Guild to be eligible for awards consideration.

    The Writers Guild Awards honor outstanding writing in film, television, new media, videogames, news, radio, promotional, and graphic animation categories. The awards will be presented jointly at simultaneous ceremonies on Saturday, February 14, 2015, in Los Angeles at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza and in New York City at the Edison Ballroom.

    For more information about the 2015 Writers Guild Awards, please visit www.wga.org or www.wgaeast.org.

    The Writers Guild of America, West (WGAW) and Writers Guild of America, East (WGAE) are labor unions representing writers in motion pictures, television, cable, digital media, and broadcast news. The Guilds negotiate and administer contracts that protect the creative and economic rights of their members; conduct programs, seminars, and events on issues of interest to writers; and present writers’ views to various bodies of government. For more information on the Writers Guild of America, East, visit www.wgaeast.org. For more information on the Writers Guild of America, West, visit www.wga.org.


    2015 Writers Guild Award nominations for Feature Film

    ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
    Boyhood, Written by Richard Linklater; IFC Films
    Foxcatcher, Written by E. Max Frye and Dan Futterman; Sony Pictures Classics
    The Grand Budapest Hotel, Screenplay by Wes Anderson; Story by Wes Anderson & Hugo Guinness; Fox Searchlight
    Nightcrawler, Written by Dan Gilroy; Open Road Films
    Whiplash, Written by Damien Chazelle; Sony Pictures Classics

    ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
    American Sniper, Written by Jason Hall; Based on the book by Chris Kyle with Scott McEwen and Jim DeFelice; Warner Bros.
    Gone Girl, Screenplay by Gillian Flynn; Based on her novel; 20th Century Fox
    Guardians of the Galaxy, Written by James Gunn and Nicole Perlman; Based on the Marvel comic by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning; Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
    The Imitation Game, Written by Graham Moore; Based on the book Alan Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodges; The Weinstein Company
    Wild, Screenplay by Nick Hornby; Based on the book by Cheryl Strayed; Fox Searchlight

    DOCUMENTARY SCREENPLAY
    Finding Vivian Maier, Written by John Maloof & Charlie Siskel; Sundance Selects
    The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz, Written by Brian Knappenberger; FilmBuff
    Last Days in Vietnam, Written by Mark Bailey & Kevin McAlester; American Experience Films
    Red Army, Written by Gabe Polsky; Sony Pictures Classics

    2015 ACTRA Awards in Toronto – nominations

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    ACTRA Toronto announces the nominees for the 13th Annual ACTRA Awards in Toronto. The ACTRA Awards in Toronto will take place at the Carlu on Friday, February 20, 2015.

    "The value of these artists is immeasurable, except it isn't," says David Sparrow, President of ACTRA Toronto. "Performers of this calibre add real artistic and commercial value to these films and television shows and we're so proud they are part of our union community."

    Tantoo Cardinal will be presented with ACTRA Toronto's 2015 Award of Excellence at the live show and party this year. The Award of Excellence recognizes an exceptional body of work and a commitment to advocacy on behalf of all performers. Jamie Jones will be honoured with the ACTRA Toronto Stunt Award. The show will be hosted by Arisa Cox, with musical entertainment by God Made Me Funky.

    ACTRA Toronto is the largest organization within ACTRA, representing over 15,000 of Canada's 22,000 professional performers working in the English-language recorded media in Canada. As an advocate for Canadian culture since 1943, ACTRA is a member-driven union that continues to secure rights and respect for the work of professional performers.


    Nominees for Outstanding Performance – Voice
    David Berni (Yay-Ok) Rocket Monkeys, "Monkey Proof"
    Cory Doran (Multiple Personality Mike) Total Drama"The Final Wreck-ening"
    Julie Lemieux (Granny Butternut) Numb Chucks"Granny's Gone Wild"
    Terry McGurrin (Dillweed) Numb Chucks"Moosetaken Identity"
    Tony Nappo (Jimmy Falcone) Fugget About It, "The Balls on this Room!"

    Nominees for Outstanding Performance – Female
    Lauren Ash (Carol) Dirty Singles
    Christine Horne (Erin) Entangled
    Andrea Martin (Ceil) Working the Engels, Pilot
    Tatiana Maslany (various) Orphan Black,"By Means Which Have Never Yet Been Tried"
    Kate Trotter (Alice) Tru Love

    Nominees for Outstanding Performance – Male
    Gavin Crawford (Adam) Two 4 One
    Ennis Esmer (Sean) Dirty Singles
    Jordan Gavaris (Felix) Orphan Black, "Mingling Its Own Nature With It"
    Pat Mills (David Gold) Guidance
    Colin Mochrie (Carl) The Anniversary


    People’s Choice Awards 2015 – winners

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    The People have spoken!

    Robert Downey Jr., The Big Bang Theory, and Grey’s Anatomy were among the big winners at the People’s Choice Awards on Wednesday night in Los Angeles.

    Hosted by Mom stars Anna Faris and Allison Janney, the telecast honored the very best in movies, music and TV — as chosen solely by fans.

    Movie superheroes reigned supreme at the annual telecast, which kicks off award season. Iron Man’s Robert Downey Jr. picked up two awards, including “Favorite Movie Actor” and “Favorite Dramatic Movie Actor,” while his Avengers co-star Chris Evans walked away with “Favorite Action Movie Star.”

    In TV, fans lent support to ratings stalwart The Big Bang Theory. The CBS sitcom won “Favorite TV Show” and “Favorite Network TV Comedy,” while star Kaley Cuoco was honored with “Favorite Comedic TV Actress” for the second year in a row. Another big winner? Grey’s Anatomy. Fans showered the long-running ABC drama, which is currently in its eleventh season, with a number of accolades, including “Favorite Network TV Drama.” The show’s leads, Ellen Pompeo, also won big with “Favorite Dramatic TV Actress” accolade.

    People’s Choice Awards 2015 performers Iggy Azalea and Lady Antebellum capped off the night with some awards of their own. Iggy, who performed “Beg For It,” won “Favorite Hip-Hop Artist,” while Lady Antebellum accepted the trophy for “Favorite Country Group” shortly after hitting the stage for their set.

    Complete list of winners for the People’s Choice Awards 2015
    winners in bold

    Favorite Humanitarian
    Ben Affleck

    MOVIE WINNERS

    Favorite Movie
    22 Jump Street
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    Maleficent
    X-Men: Days of Future Past

    Favorite Movie Actor
    Brad Pitt
    Channing Tatum
    Hugh Jackman
    Mark Wahlberg
    Robert Downey Jr.

    Favorite Movie Actress
    Angelina Jolie
    Emma Stone
    Jennifer Lawrence
    Melissa McCarthy
    Scarlett Johansson

    Favorite Movie Duo
    Andrew Garfield & Emma Stone (The Amazing Spider-Man 2)
    Chris Evans & Scarlett Johansson (Captain America: The Winter Soldier)
    Jonah Hill & Channing Tatum (22 Jump Street)
    Shailene Woodley & Ansel Elgort (The Fault in Our Stars)
    Shailene Woodley & Theo James (Divergent)

    Favorite Action Movie
    The Amazing Spider-Man 2
    Captain America: The Winter Soldier
    Divergent
    Guardians of the Galaxy
    X-Men: Days of Future Past

    Favorite Action Movie Actor
    Chris Evans
    Denzel Washington
    Hugh Jackman
    Liam Neeson
    Mark Wahlberg

    Favorite Action Movie Actress
    Angelina Jolie
    Jennifer Lawrence
    Scarlett Johansson
    Shailene Woodley
    Zoe Saldana

    Favorite Comedic Movie
    22 Jump Street
    Blended
    Let’s Be Cops
    Neighbors
    The Other Woman

    Favorite Comedic Movie Actor
    Adam Sandler
    Channing Tatum
    Jonah Hill
    Seth Rogen
    Zac Efron

    Favorite Comedic Movie Actress
    Cameron Diaz
    Charlize Theron
    Drew Barrymore
    Melissa McCarthy
    Tina Fey

    Favorite Dramatic Movie
    The Fault in Our Stars
    The Giver
    Heaven Is for Real
    If I Stay
    Noah

    Favorite Dramatic Movie Actor
    Ben Affleck
    Brad Pitt
    George Clooney
    Matt Damon
    Robert Downey Jr.

    Favorite Dramatic Movie Actress
    Chloë Grace Moretz
    Emma Stone
    Meryl Streep
    Reese Witherspoon
    Shailene Woodley

    Favorite Family Movie
    Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day
    How to Train Your Dragon 2
    The LEGO Movie
    Maleficent
    Rio 2

    Favorite Thriller Movie
    Annabelle
    Dracula Untold
    The Equalizer
    Gone Girl
    The Purge: Anarchy

    TV WINNERS

    Favorite TV Icon
    Betty White

    Favorite TV Show
    The Big Bang Theory
    Game Of Thrones
    NCIS
    Once Upon a Time
    The Walking Dead

    Favorite Network TV Comedy
    2 Broke Girls
    The Big Bang Theory
    Modern Family
    Mom
    New Girl

    Favorite Comedic TV Actor
    Ashton Kutcher
    Chris Colfer
    Jesse Tyler Ferguson
    Jim Parsons
    Ty Burrell

    Favorite Comedic TV Actress
    Amy Poehler
    Kaley Cuoco-Sweeting
    Melissa McCarthy
    Sofia Vergara
    Zooey Deschanel

    Favorite Network TV Drama
    Chicago Fire
    Downton Abbey
    Grey’s Anatomy
    Revenge
    Scandal

    Favorite Dramatic TV Actor
    Dax Shepard
    Jesse Williams
    Justin Chambers
    Patrick Dempsey
    Taylor Kinney

    Favorite Dramatic TV Actress
    Alyssa Milano
    Ellen Pompeo
    Emily VanCamp
    Hayden Panettiere
    Kerry Washington

    Favorite Cable TV Comedy
    Baby Daddy
    Cougar Town
    Faking It
    Melissa & Joey
    Young & Hungry

    Favorite Cable TV Drama
    Bates Motel
    Pretty Little Liars
    Rizzoli & Isles
    Sons of Anarchy
    True Detective

    Favorite Cable TV Actor
    Charlie Hunnam
    Eric Dane
    Matt Bomer
    Sean Bean
    William H. Macy

    Favorite Cable TV Actress
    Angie Harmon
    Ashley Benson
    Courteney Cox
    Kristen Bell
    Lucy Hale

    Favorite TV Crime Drama
    Bones
    Castle
    Criminal Minds
    The Mentalist
    NCIS

    Favorite Crime Drama TV Actor
    David Boreanaz
    Kevin Bacon
    Nathan Fillion
    Shemar Moore
    Simon Baker

    Favorite Crime Drama TV Actress
    Emily Deschanel
    Lucy Liu
    Mariska Hargitay
    Robin Tunney
    Stana Katic

    Favorite Network Sci-Fi/Fantasy TV Show
    Beauty and the Beast
    Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
    Once Upon a Time
    Supernatural
    The Vampire Diaries

    Favorite Cable Sci-Fi/Fantasy TV Show
    American Horror Story
    Doctor Who
    Game of Thrones
    Outlander
    The Walking Dead

    Favorite Sci-Fi/Fantasy TV Actor
    Ian Somerhalder
    Jared Padalecki
    Jensen Ackles
    Misha Collins
    Paul Wesley

    Favorite Sci-Fi/Fantasy TV Actress
    Ginnifer Goodwin
    Jennifer Morrison
    Jessica Lange
    Kristin Kreuk
    Nina Dobrev

    Favorite Competition TV Show
    America’s Got Talent
    Dancing with the Stars
    Hell’s Kitchen
    MasterChef
    The Voice

    Favorite Daytime TV Host(s)
    Ellen DeGeneres
    Kelly Ripa & Michael Strahan
    Queen Latifah
    Rachael Ray
    Steve Harvey

    Favorite Late Night Talk Show Host
    Conan O’Brien
    Craig Ferguson
    David Letterman
    Jimmy Fallon
    Jimmy Kimmel

    Favorite Dramedy
    Awkward.
    Orange Is the New Black
    Shameless
    Suits
    White Collar

    Favorite TV Duo
    David Boreanaz & Emily Deschanel (Bones)
    Ginnifer Goodwin & Josh Dallas (Once Upon a Time)
    Jared Padalecki & Jensen Ackles (Supernatural)
    Nathan Fillion & Stana Katic (Castle)
    Nina Dobrev & Ian Somerhalder (The Vampire Diaries)

    Favorite TV Character We Miss Most
    Dr. Cristina Yang played by Sandra Oh (Grey’s Anatomy)
    Dr. Lance Sweets played by John Francis Daley (Bones)
    Hershel Greene played by Scott Wilson (The Walking Dead)
    Leslie Shay played by Lauren German (Chicago Fire)
    Neal Cassidy played by Michael Raymond-James (Once Upon a Time)

    Favorite Actor In A New TV Series
    Ben McKenzie
    David Tennant
    Dylan McDermott
    Laurence Fishburne
    Scott Bakula

    Favorite Actress In A New TV Series
    Debra Messing
    Jada Pinkett Smith
    Octavia Spencer
    Téa Leoni
    Viola Davis

    Favorite Sketch Comedy TV Show
    Drunk History
    Inside Amy Schumer
    Key & Peele
    Kroll Show
    Saturday Night Live

    Favorite Animated TV Show
    American Dad
    Bob’s Burgers
    Family Guy
    The Simpsons
    South Park

    Favorite New TV Comedy
    black-ish
    Cristela
    Jane the Virgin
    Marry Me
    The McCarthys

    Favorite New TV Drama
    Constantine
    The Flash
    Forever
    Gotham
    How to Get Away with Murder

    MUSIC WINNERS

    Favorite Male Artist
    Blake Shelton
    Ed Sheeran
    John Legend
    Pharrell Williams
    Sam Smith

    Favorite Female Artist
    Beyoncé
    Iggy Azalea
    Katy Perry
    Sia
    Taylor Swift

    Favorite Group
    Coldplay
    Imagine Dragons
    Maroon 5
    One Direction
    OneRepublic

    Favorite Breakout Artist
    5 Seconds of Summer
    Charli XCX
    Fifth Harmony
    Meghan Trainor
    Sam Smith

    Favorite Male Country Artist
    Blake Shelton
    Brad Paisley
    Hunter Hayes
    Luke Bryan
    Tim McGraw

    Favorite Female Country Artist
    Carrie Underwood
    Dolly Parton
    Faith Hill
    Lucy Hale
    Miranda Lambert

    Favorite Country Group
    The Band Perry
    Florida Georgia Line
    Lady Antebellum
    Rascal Flatts
    Zac Brown Band

    Favorite Pop Artist
    Beyoncé
    Jennifer Lopez
    Jessie J
    Sia
    Taylor Swift

    Favorite Hip-Hop Artist
    Drake
    Iggy Azalea
    Jay Z
    Nicki Minaj
    T.I.

    Favorite R&B Artist
    Chris Brown
    Jennifer Hudson
    John Legend
    Pharrell Williams
    Usher

    Favorite Album
    G I R L by Pharrell Williams
    Ghost Stories by Coldplay
    In the Lonely Hour by Sam Smith
    My Everything by Ariana Grande
    X by Ed Sheeran

    Favorite Song
    “All About That Bass” by Meghan Trainor
    “Bang Bang” by Jessie J, Ariana Grande & Nicki Minaj
    “Maps” by Maroon 5
    “Shake It Off” by Taylor Swift
    “Stay with Me” by Sam Smith


    8th Annual Cinema Eye Honors – winners

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    Citizenfour, Laura Poitras’ first person account of Edward Snowden’s revelations about NSA spying, picked up four awards at the 8th Annual Cinema Eye Honors, including Outstanding Nonfiction Feature and Outstanding Direction, held Wednesday night at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, New York. It’s the second film in Cinema Eye history to win four awards (Ari Folman’s Waltz With Bashir was the first) and the second to win both the Direction and Feature awards (Steve James’ The Interrupters did it in 2012).

    Poitras also becomes the first person in Cinema Eye history to win the award for Outstanding Direction twice (she previously won for The Oath in 2011). Citizenfour also won awards for Mathilde Bonnefoy’s Editing and for the film’s Production, which was shared by Poitras, Bonnefoy and Dirk Wilutsky. In total, Poitras won three awards, tying a record set previously by Lixin Fan in 2011 for Last Train Home.

    There were two ties at this year’s Cinema Eye Honors, a first for the awards. In the category of Graphic Design, Syd Garon of Jodorowsky’s Dune and Heather Brantman & Tim Fisher of Particle Fever shared the honor, while in Cinematography, laurels were shared by 20,000 Days on Earth’s Erik Wilson and Virunga’s Franklin Dow and Orlando von Einsiedel. Previously, there had only been one other tie at Cinema Eye, in 2010 for Graphic Design.

    Alan Hicks’ Keep On Keepin’ On won the Audience Choice Prize, which was determined by public voting at the Cinema Eye website. More than 7,000 people cast their vote in the final 36 hours of voting for the Audience award.

    The Nonfiction Short Film award went to Lucy Walker’s The Lions Mouth Open. Walker won the Cinema Eye Honor for Nonfiction Film for Television last year for her film The Crash Reel. She becomes the first person in Cinema Eye history to win awards in back-to-back years in different categories.

    This year’s award for Nonfiction Film for Television went to ESPN 30 for 30’s The Price of Gold, directed by Nanette Burstein.

    Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Sam Green hosted this year’s event, with an audio assist from Serial podcast host Sarah Koenig, who served as announcer and Voice of God for this year’s proceedings. Presenters included documentary legends Albert Maysles, DA Pennebaker, Steve James, Alan Berliner and the director and editor of this year’s Legacy Award winner Paris is Burning, Jennie Livingston and Jonathan Oppenheim.

    Nominations for the 8th Annual Cinema Eye Honors


    Complete list of winners for the 8th Annual Cinema Eye Honors

    Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking
    Citizenfour
    Directed by Laura Poitras
    Produced by Laura Poitras, Mathilde Bonnefoy and Dirk Wilutzky

    Outstanding Achievement in Direction
    Laura Poitras
    Citizenfour

    Outstanding Achievement in Editing
    Mathilde Bonnefoy
    Citizenfour

    Outstanding Achievement in Production
    Laura Poitras, Mathilde Bonnefoy and Dirk Wilutzky
    Citizenfour

    Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography (tie)
    Erik Wilson
    20,000 Days on Earth
    Franklin Dow and Orlando von Einsiedel
    Virunga

    Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Films Made for Television
    The Price of Gold
    Directed by Nanette Burstein
    Produced by Libby Geist
    For ESPN/30 for 30: John Dahl, Connor Schell, Bill Simmons

    Audience Choice Prize
    Keep On Keepin’ On
    Directed by Alan Hicks

    Outstanding Achievement in a Debut Feature Film
    Finding Vivian Maier
    Directed by John Maloof and Charlie Siskel

    Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Score
    Nick Cave and Warren Ellis
    20,000 Days on Earth

    Outstanding Achievement in Graphic Design or Animation (tie)
    Syd Garon
    Jodorowsky’s Dune
    Heather Brantman & Tim Fisher
    Particle Fever

    Spotlight Award
    1971
    Directed by Johanna Hamilton

    Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Short Filmmaking
    The Lion’s Mouth Opens
    Directed by Lucy Walker

    Heterodox Award
    Boyhood
    Directed by Richard Linklater

    Legacy Award
    Paris is Burning
    Directed by Jennie Livingston


    About Cinema Eye, Cinema Eye Week and the 2015 Cinema Eye Honors
    Cinema Eye was founded in 2007 to recognize excellence in artistry and craft in nonfiction filmmaking. It was the first and remains the only international nonfiction award to recognize the whole creative team, presenting annual craft awards in directing, producing, cinematography, editing, composing and graphic design/animation.

    The Honors ceremony is the centerpiece of Cinema Eye Week, a multi-day, multi-city celebration that acknowledges the best work in nonfiction film through screenings and events. The final three days of Cinema Eye Week culminated in New York City, where a series of celebratory events brought together many of the year’s most accomplished filmmakers.

    The Premiere Sponsor for the Cinema Eye Honors is HBO Documentary Films. Netflix and Radius/TWC are Major Sponsors. Festival Partners include Camden International Film Festival, CPH:DOX, Hot Docs and True/False. The Institutional Sponsor for CEH15 is The Murray Center for Documentary Journalism at the University of Missouri. The Museum of the Moving Image is the Venue Partner. Industry Sponsors include Abel Cine, ACE American Cinema Editors, Chicken and Egg, Filmmaker Magazine, LEF Foundation and Spacestation.

    Cinema Eye is headed by a core team that includes Nominations Committee Chair Charlotte Cook (Head of Programming, Hot Docs Film Festival), Cinema Eye Week Producer Will Lennon (director, Phoebe’s Birthday Cheeseburger), Board Chair Andrea Meditch (executive producer, Buck and Man on Wire), Honors Chair Esther Robinson (director, A Walk Into the Sea: Danny Williams and the Warhol Factory), Founding Director AJ Schnack (director, Caucus and Kurt Cobain About A Son) and Cinema Eye Week Director Nathan Truesdell (producer, We Always Lie to Strangers). Wendy Garrett served as the 2015 Honors Producer.

    Nominees for the Cinema Eye Honors feature awards are determined in voting by the top documentary programmers from throughout the world. This year’s nominations committee included Charlotte Cook (Hot Docs), David Courier (Sundance), Heather Croall (Sheffield Doc/Fest), Hussain Currimbhoy (Sundance Film Festival), Cara Cusumano (Tribeca), Joanne Feinberg (Ashland Film Festival), Elena Fortes (Ambulante), Ben Fowlie (Camden International Film Festival), Tom Hall (Montclair Film Festival), Sarah Harris (Dallas Film Festival), Doug Jones (formerly of Los Angeles Film Festival), Jim Kolmar (SXSW), Amir Labaki (It’s All True, Brazil), Artur Liebhart (Planete Doc Review), David Nugent (Hamptons Film Festival), Veton Nurkollari (DokuFest Kosovo), Janet Pierson (SXSW), Thom Powers (Toronto International Film Festival), Rachel Rosen (San Francisco), Charlotte Selb (RIDM Montreal), Sky Sitney (formerly of AFI DOCS), Genna Terranova (Tribeca), Sadie Tillery (Full Frame), Basil Tsiokos (DOC NYC) and David Wilson (True/False).

    Nominees for the Cinema Eye Honors short film awards were selected by a nominations committee that included Karen Cirillo (True/False), Charlotte Cook (Hot Docs), Hussain Currimbhoy (Sheffield Doc/Fest), Cara Cusumano (Tribeca), Ben Fowlie (Camden International Film Festival), Claudette Godfrey (SXSW), Doug Jones (formerly of Los Angeles Film Festival), Ted Mott (Full Frame), Veton Nurkollari (DokuFest Kosovo), Rachel Rosen (San Francisco) Sky Sitney (formerly of AFI DOCS) and Kim Yutani (Sundance).

    Nominees for the Television Award were selected by a nominations committee of film critics and writers that included Miriam Bale, Steve Dollar, Eric Hynes, Liz Shannon Miller, Mark Olsen and Allison Willmore.

    The 27th Annual USC Libraries Scripter Award – finalists announced

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    Scripter honors the screenwriter or screenwriters of the year’s most accomplished cinematic adaptation as well as the author or authors of the written work upon which the screenplay is based.

    The Friends of the USC Libraries established Scripter in 1988. Previous Scripter winners include the screenwriters and authors of 12 Years a Slave, The Social Network, A Beautiful Mind and The English Patient.

    Chaired by Howard Rodman, USC professor and vice president of the Writers Guild of America, West, the 2015 Scripter selection committee selected the five finalists from a field of 97 eligible adaptations.

    Serving on the selection committee, among many others, are film critics Leonard Maltin, Anne Thompson and Kenneth Turan; authors Michael Chabon, Michael Ondaatje and Mona Simpson; screenwriters John Ridley, Erin Cressida Wilson and Steve Zaillian; and USC deans Elizabeth Daley of the School of Cinematic Arts, Madeline Puzo of the School of Dramatic Arts and Catherine Quinlan of the USC Libraries.

    The finalists are in alphabetical order by film title:
    • Gillian Flynn, author and screenwriter of Gone Girl
    • Author Andrew Hodges, who wrote the book Alan Turing: The Enigma, and screenwriter Graham Moore
 for The Imitation Game
    • Novelist Thomas Pynchon and screenwriter Paul Thomas Anderson for Inherent Vice

    • Jane Hawking, author of Travelling to Infinity: My Life With Stephen, and screenwriter Anthony McCarten for The Theory of Everything
    • Screenwriter Nick Hornby for Wild, adapted from Cheryl Strayed’s memoir Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail
    The studios distributing the finalist films and the publishers of the original stories are:
    • Gone Girl—Twentieth Century Fox and Crown Publishers
    • The Imitation Game—Weinstein Company and Princeton Univ. Press (film tie-in edition)
    • Inherent Vice—Warner Bros. and Penguin Books
    • The Theory of Everything—Focus Features and Alma Books
    • Wild—Fox Searchlight and Vintage Books (film tie-in edition)
    The USC Libraries will announce the winning authors and screenwriters at a black-tie ceremony on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2015 in the historic Edward L. Doheny Jr. Memorial Library on the University Park campus of the University of Southern California. Academy Award winners Helen Mirren and Taylor Hackford will serve as honorary dinner chairs.

    Mosley to receive Literary Achievement Award

    Celebrated mystery and crime writer Walter Mosley — the author of more than 40 books, including the series on private investigator Easy Rawlins — will receive the USC Libraries Literary Achievement Award.

    Mosley is currently working on a Broadway version of his novel Devil in a Blue Dress, a 1995 film adaptation starring Denzel Washington.

    Nominations Announced for the EE British Academy Film Awards in 2015

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    The nominations have been announced for the EE British Academy Film Awards in 2015.

    The Grand Budapest Hotel receives 11 nominations. Birdman and The Theory of Everything are each nominated in ten categories. The Imitation Game has nine nominations. Boyhood and Whiplash are each nominated five times. Mr. Turner, Nightcrawler and Interstellar receive four nominations. Pride has three nominations.

    The Grand Budapest Hotel is nominated in the following categories: Best Film, Director and Original Screenplay for Wes Anderson, Original Music, Cinematography, Editing, Production Design, Costume Design, Make Up & Hair and Sound. Ralph Fiennes is nominated for Leading Actor.

    Birdman is nominated for Best Film, Director for Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Original Screenplay, Original Music, Cinematography, Editing and Sound. Michael Keaton is nominated for Leading Actor. Edward Norton is nominated for Supporting Actor and Emma Stone is nominated for Supporting Actress.

    The Theory of Everything receives nominations for Best Film, Outstanding British Film, Director for James Marsh, Adapted Screenplay, Original Music, Editing, Costume Design and Make Up & Hair. Eddie Redmayne is nominated for Leading Actor, whilst Felicity Jones receives a nomination for Leading Actress.

    The Imitation Game is nominated in Best Film, Outstanding British Film, Adapted Screenplay, Editing, Production Design, Costume Design and Sound. Benedict Cumberbatch is nominated for Leading Actor and Keira Knightley is nominated for Supporting Actress.

    Boyhood completes the Best Film line-up, with four further nominations in Director and Original Screenplay for Richard Linklater, with Supporting Actor and Supporting Actress nominations for Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette respectively.

    The nominees for the EE Rising Star Award, announced earlier this week, are Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Jack O’Connell, Margot Robbie, Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley. This audience award is voted for by the British public and presented to an actor or actress who has demonstrated exceptional talent and promise.

    The EE British Academy Film Awards take place on Sunday 8 February at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London.

    The ceremony will be hosted by Stephen Fry and will be broadcast exclusively on BBC One and BBC One HD, preceded by a red carpet show on BBC Three. The ceremony is also broadcast in all major territories around the world.


    Nominations for the 2014 British Academy Film Awards (presented in 2015)

    BEST FILM
    Birdman - Alejandro G. Iñárritu, John Lesher, James W. Skotchdopole
    Boyhood - Richard Linklater, Cathleen Sutherland
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven Rales, Jeremy Dawson
    The Imitation Game - Nora Grossman, Ido Ostrowsky, Teddy Schwarzman
    The Theory of Everything - Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Lisa Bruce, Anthony McCarten

    OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM
    ’71 - Yann Demange, Angus Lamont, Robin Gutch, Gregory Burke
    The Imitation Game - Morten Tyldum, Nora Grossman, Ido Ostrowsky, Teddy Schwarzman, Graham Moore
    Paddington - Paul King, David Heyman
    Pride - Matthew Warchus, David Livingstone, Stephen Beresford
    The Theory of Everything - James Marsh, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Lisa Bruce, Anthony McCarten
    Under the Skin - Jonathan Glazer, James Wilson, Nick Wechsler, Walter Campbell

    OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER
    Elaine Constantine (Writer/Director) Northern Soul
    Gregory Burke (Writer), Yann Demange (Director) ’71
    Hong Khaou (Writer/Director) Lilting
    Paul Katis (Director/Producer), Andrew de Lotbinière (Producer) Kajaki: The True Story
    Stephen Beresford (Writer), David Livingstone (Producer) Pride

    FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
    Ida - Pawel Pawlikowski, Eric Abraham, Piotr Dzieciol, Ewa Puszczynska
    Leviathan - Andrey Zvyagintsev, Alexander Rodnyansky, Sergey Melkumov
    The Lunchbox - Ritesh Batra, Arun Rangachari, Anurag Kashyap, Guneet Monga
    Trash - Stephen Daldry, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Kris Thykier
    Two Days, One Night - Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne, Denis Freyd

    DOCUMENTARY
    20 Feet From Stardom - Morgan Neville, Caitrin Rogers, Gil Friesen
    20,000 Days On Earth - Iain Forsyth, Jane Pollard
    Citizenfour - Laura Poitras
    Finding Vivian Maier - John Maloof, Charlie Siskel
    Virunga - Orlando von Einsiedel, Joanna Natasegara

    ANIMATED FILM
    Big Hero 6 - Don Hall, Chris Williams
    The Boxtrolls - Anthony Stacchi, Graham Annable
    The Lego Movie - Phil Lord, Christopher Miller

    DIRECTOR
    Birdman - Alejandro G. Iñárritu
    Boyhood - Richard Linklater
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Wes Anderson
    The Theory of Everything - James Marsh
    Whiplash - Damien Chazelle

    ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
    Birdman - Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris Jr, Armando Bo
    Boyhood - Richard Linklater
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Wes Anderson
    Nightcrawler - Dan Gilroy
    Whiplash - Damien Chazelle

    ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
    American Sniper - Jason Hall
    Gone Girl - Gillian Flynn
    The Imitation Game - Graham Moore
    Paddington - Paul King
    The Theory of Everything - Anthony McCarten

    LEADING ACTOR
    Benedict Cumberbatch for The Imitation Game
    Eddie Redmayne for The Theory of Everything
    Jake Gyllenhaal for Nightcrawler
    Michael Keaton for Birdman
    Ralph Fiennes for The Grand Budapest Hotel

    LEADING ACTRESS
    Amy Adams for Big Eyes
    Felicity Jones for The Theory of Everything
    Julianne Moore for Still Alice
    Reese Witherspoon for Wild
    Rosamund Pike for Gone Girl

    SUPPORTING ACTOR
    Edward Norton for Birdman
    Ethan Hawke for Boyhood
    J.K. Simmons for Whiplash
    Mark Ruffalo for Foxcatcher
    Steve Carell for Foxcatcher

    SUPPORTING ACTRESS
    Emma Stone for Birdman
    Imelda Staunton for Pride
    Keira Knightley for The Imitation Game
    Patricia Arquette for Boyhood
    Rene Russo for Nightcrawler

    ORIGINAL MUSIC
    Birdman - Antonio Sanchez
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Alexandre Desplat
    Interstellar - Hans Zimmer
    The Theory of Everything - Jóhann Jóhannsson
    Under The Skin - Mica Levi

    CINEMATOGRAPHY
    Birdman - Emmanuel Lubezki
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Robert Yeoman
    Ida - Lukasz Zal, Ryzsard Lenczewski
    Interstellar - Hoyte van Hoytema
    Mr. Turner - Dick Pope

    EDITING
    Due to a tie in voting in this category, there are six nominations
    Birdman - Douglas Crise, Stephen Mirrione
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Barney Pilling
    The Imitation Game - William Goldenberg
    Nightcrawler - John Gilroy
    The Theory of Everything - Jinx Godfrey
    Whiplash - Tom Cross

    PRODUCTION DESIGN
    Big Eyes - Rick Heinrichs, Shane Vieau
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Adam Stockhausen, Anna Pinnock
    The Imitation Game - Maria Djurkovic, Tatiana MacDonald
    Interstellar - Nathan Crowley, Gary Fettis
    Mr. Turner - Suzie Davies, Charlotte Watts

    COSTUME DESIGN
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Milena Canonero
    The Imitation Game - Sammy Sheldon Differ
    Into the Woods - Colleen Atwood
    Mr. Turner - Jacqueline Durran
    The Theory of Everything - Steven Noble

    MAKE UP & HAIR
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Frances Hannon
    Guardians of the Galaxy - Elizabeth Yianni-Georgiou, David White
    Into the Woods - Peter Swords King, J. Roy Helland
    Mr. Turner - Christine Blundell, Lesa Warrener
    The Theory of Everything - Jan Sewell

    SOUND
    American Sniper - Walt Martin, John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff, Alan Robert Murray, Bub Asman
    Birdman - Thomas Varga, Martin Hernández, Aaron Glascock, Jon Taylor, Frank A. Montaño
    The Grand Budapest Hotel - Wayne Lemmer, Christopher Scarabosio, Pawel Wdowczak
    The Imitation Game - John Midgley, Lee Walpole, Stuart Hilliker, Martin Jensen
    Whiplash - Thomas Curley, Ben Wilkins, Craig Mann

    SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
    Dawn of the Planet of the Apes - Joe Letteri, Dan Lemmon, Erik Winquist, Daniel Barrett
    Guardians of the Galaxy - Stephane Ceretti, Paul Corbould, Jonathan Fawkner, Nicolas Aithadi
    The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies - Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon, David Clayton, R. Christopher White
    Interstellar - Paul Franklin, Scott Fisher, Andrew Lockley
    X-Men: Days of Future Past - Richard Stammers, Anders Langlands, Tim Crosbie, Cameron Waldbauer

    BRITISH SHORT ANIMATION
    The Bigger Picture - Chris Hees, Daisy Jacobs, Jennifer Majka
    Monkey Love Experiments - Ainslie Henderson, Cam Fraser, Will Anderson
    My Dad - Marcus Armitage

    BRITISH SHORT FILM
    Boogaloo And Graham - Brian J. Falconer, Michael Lennox, Ronan Blaney
    Emotional Fusebox - Michael Berliner, Rachel Tunnard
    The Karman Line - Campbell Beaton, Dawn King, Tiernan Hanby, Oscar Sharp
    Slap - Islay Bell-Webb, Michelangelo Fano, Nick Rowland
    Three Brothers - Aleem Khan, Matthieu de Braconier, Stephanie Paeplow

    THE EE RISING STAR AWARD (voted for by the public)
    Gugu Mbatha-Raw
    Jack O’Connell
    Margot Robbie
    Miles Teller
    Shailene Woodley

    Intimacies | An Evening with Ingrid Veninger

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    Join us for a once in a lifetime experience where we will be screening The Animal Project with an introduction by director Ingrid Veninger followed by a meet and greet and Q&A with the director and cast.

    "After an unusual and inspiring dream, an unorthodox theatre director (Aaron Poole) attempts to push a group of eager young performers out of their comfort zones, while struggling with his own ability to live and authentic and fulfilling life with his teenage son."

    The event takes place January 16 from 7:00 –10:00 pm and is free to all.

    Event Details:
    The Screenwriting Process | An Introduction by Ingrid Veninger
    Meet the Director and Cast of the Film
    Screening of The Animal Project
    Discussion and Q&A, moderated by Kay Armatage, will follow
    Fri 16 Jan 2015 | 7:00 PM
    Innis Town Hall | 2 Sussex Ave., Toronto
    For any inquires, please contact alumni.innis@utoronto.ca or 416-978-3424

    Make sure to REGISTER at http://alumni.innis.utoronto.ca/event/intimacies-evening-ingrid-veninger and arrive at 7pm sharp to ensure seating!

    For additional information about the film, director, and cast, make sure to check out the official webpage http://theanimalprojectmovie.com/



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