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词条 21st Critics' Choice Awards
释义

  1. Winners and nominees

     Louis XIII Genius Award  Critics' Choice MVP Award  "Most Bingeworthy" Fan-Voted Award 

  2. Star Wars: The Force Awakens controversy

  3. Films by multiple nominations and wins

  4. See also

  5. References

{{Infobox film awards
| number = 21
| award = Critics' Choice Awards
| date = January 17, 2016
| site = Barker Hangar, Santa Monica, California, United States
| host = T.J. Miller
| best_film = Spotlight
| most_wins = Fury Road (9)
| most_nominations = Mad Max: Fury Road (13)
| website = {{url|http://www.criticschoice.com}}
| network = A&E / Lifetime / LMN
| last = 20th
| next = 22nd
}}

The 21st Critics' Choice Awards were presented on January 17, 2016 at the Barker Hangar at the Santa Monica Airport, honoring the finest achievements of 2015 filmmaking. The ceremony was broadcast on A&E and hosted by T.J. Miller. The nominees were announced on December 14, 2015.[1] In addition, this year marked the first time the awards were presented with the Critics' Choice Television Awards.[2]

Winners and nominees

{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Picture}}Spotlight
  • The Big Short
  • Bridge of Spies
  • Brooklyn
  • Carol
  • Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • Room
  • Sicario
  • The Force Awakens
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Director}}George Miller – Fury Road
  • Todd Haynes – Carol
  • Alejandro G. Iñárritu – The Revenant
  • Tom McCarthy – Spotlight
  • Ridley Scott – The Martian
  • Steven Spielberg – Bridge of Spies
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Actor}}Leonardo DiCaprio – The Revenant as Hugh Glass
  • Bryan Cranston – Trumbo as Dalton Trumbo
  • Matt Damon – The Martian as Mark Watney
  • Johnny Depp – Black Mass as James "Whitey" Bulger
  • Michael Fassbender – Steve Jobs as Steve Jobs
  • Eddie Redmayne – The Danish Girl as Lili Elbe / Einar Wegener
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Actress}}Brie Larson – Room as Joy "Ma" Newsome
  • Cate Blanchett – Carol as Carol Aird
  • Jennifer Lawrence – Joy as Joy Mangano
  • Charlotte Rampling – 45 Years as Kate Mercer
  • Saoirse Ronan – Brooklyn as Eilis Lacey
  • Charlize Theron – Fury Road as Imperator Furiosa
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Supporting Actor}}Sylvester Stallone – Creed as Rocky Balboa
  • Paul Dano – Love & Mercy as Brian Wilson
  • Tom Hardy – The Revenant as John Fitzgerald
  • Mark Ruffalo – Spotlight as Michael Rezendes
  • Mark Rylance – Bridge of Spies as Rudolf Abel
  • Michael Shannon – 99 Homes as Rick Carver
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Supporting Actress}}Alicia Vikander – The Danish Girl as Gerda Wegener
  • Jennifer Jason Leigh – The Hateful Eight as Daisy Domergue
  • Rooney Mara – Carol as Therese Belivet
  • Rachel McAdams – Spotlight as Sacha Pfeiffer
  • Helen Mirren – Trumbo as Hedda Hopper
  • Kate Winslet – Steve Jobs as Joanna Hoffman
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Young Actor/Actress}}Jacob Tremblay – Room as Jack Newsome
  • Abraham Attah – Beasts of No Nation as Agu
  • RJ Cyler – Me and Earl and the Dying Girl as Earl
  • Shameik Moore – Dope as Malcolm Adekanbi
  • Milo Parker – Mr. Holmes as Roger Munro
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Acting Ensemble}}Spotlight
  • The Big Short
  • The Hateful Eight
  • Straight Outta Compton
  • Trumbo
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Original Screenplay}}Tom McCarthy and Josh Singer – Spotlight
  • Matt Charman, Joel Coen, and Ethan Coen – Bridge of Spies
  • Alex Garland – Ex Machina
  • Quentin Tarantino – The Hateful Eight
  • Pete Docter, Meg LeFauve, and Josh Cooley – Inside Out
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Adapted Screenplay}}Adam McKay and Charles Randolph – The Big Short
  • Nick Hornby – Brooklyn
  • Drew Goddard – The Martian
  • Emma Donoghue – Room
  • Aaron Sorkin – Steve Jobs
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Animated Feature}}Inside Out
  • Anomalisa
  • The Good Dinosaur
  • The Peanuts Movie
  • Shaun the Sheep Movie
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Action Movie}}Fury Road
  • Furious 7
  • Jurassic World
  • Impossible – Rogue Nation
  • Sicario
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Actor in an Action Movie}}Tom Hardy – Fury Road as Max Rockatansky
  • Daniel Craig – Spectre as James Bond
  • Tom Cruise – Impossible – Rogue Nation as Ethan Hunt
  • Chris Pratt – Jurassic World as Owen Grady
  • Paul Rudd – Ant-Man as Scott Lang / Ant-Man
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Actress in an Action Movie}}Charlize Theron – Fury Road as Imperator Furiosa
  • Emily Blunt – Sicario as Kate Macer
  • Rebecca Ferguson – Impossible – Rogue Nation as Ilsa Faust
  • Bryce Dallas Howard – Jurassic World as Claire Dearing
  • Jennifer Lawrence – Mockingjay – Part 2 as Katniss Everdeen
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Sci-Fi/Horror Movie}}Ex Machina
  • It Follows
  • Jurassic World
  • Fury Road
  • The Martian
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Comedy}}The Big Short
  • Inside Out
  • Joy
  • Sisters
  • Spy
  • Trainwreck
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Actor in a Comedy}}Christian Bale – The Big Short as Michael Burry
  • Steve Carell – The Big Short as Mark Baum
  • Robert De Niro – The Intern as Ben Whittaker
  • Bill Hader – Trainwreck as Dr. Aaron Conners
  • Jason Statham – Spy as Rick Ford
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Actress in a Comedy}}Amy Schumer – Trainwreck as Amy Townsend
  • Tina Fey – Sisters as Kate Ellis
  • Jennifer Lawrence – Joy as Joy Mangano
  • Melissa McCarthy – Spy as Susan Cooper
  • Lily Tomlin – Grandma as Elle Reid
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Documentary Feature}}Amy
  • Cartel Land
  • Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief
  • He Named Me Malala
  • The Look of Silence
  • Where to Invade Next
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Foreign Language Film}}Son of Saul (Saul fia) • Hungary
  • The Assassin (Cìkè Niè Yinniáng) • China / Hong Kong / Taiwan
  • Goodnight Mommy (Ich seh, Ich seh) • Austria
  • Mustang • France / Germany / Turkey
  • The Second Mother (Que Horas Ela Volta?) • Brazil
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Art Direction}}Colin Gibson (Production Designer) – Fury Road
  • Adam Stockhausen (Production Designer), Rena DeAngelo (Set Decorator) – Bridge of Spies
  • François Séguin (Production Designer), Jenny Oman and Louise Tremblay (Set Decorators) – Brooklyn
  • Judy Becker (Production Designer), Heather Loeffler (Set Decorator) – Carol
  • Eve Stewart (Production Designer), Michael Standish (Set Decorator) – The Danish Girl
  • Arthur Max (Production Designer), Celia Bobak (Set Decorator) – The Martian
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Costume Design}}Jenny Beavan – Fury Road
  • Odile Dicks-Mireaux – Brooklyn
  • Sandy Powell – Carol
  • Sandy Powell – Cinderella
  • Paco Delgado – The Danish Girl
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Cinematography}}Emmanuel Lubezki – The Revenant
  • Roger Deakins – Sicario
  • Edward Lachman – Carol
  • Robert Richardson – The Hateful Eight
  • John Seale – Fury Road
  • Dariusz Wolski – The Martian
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Editing}}Margaret Sixel – Fury Road
  • Hank Corwin – The Big Short
  • Pietro Scalia – The Martian
  • Stephen Mirrione – The Revenant
  • Tom McArdle – Spotlight
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Score}}Ennio Morricone – The Hateful Eight
  • Carter Burwell – Carol
  • Jóhann Jóhannsson – Sicario
  • Ryuichi Sakamoto and Alva Noto – The Revenant
  • Howard Shore – Spotlight
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Song}}"See You Again" – Furious 7
  • "Love Me like You Do" – Fifty Shades of Grey
  • "One Kind of Love" – Love & Mercy
  • "Simple Song #3" – Youth
  • "Til It Happens to You" – The Hunting Ground
  • "Writing's on the Wall" – Spectre
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Hair and Makeup}}Fury Road
  • Black Mass
  • Carol
  • The Danish Girl
  • The Hateful Eight
  • The Revenant
{{Award category|#A07EC9|Best Visual Effects}}Fury Road
  • Ex Machina
  • Jurassic World
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • The Walk

Louis XIII Genius Award

Industrial Light & Magic

Critics' Choice MVP Award

Amy Schumer

"Most Bingeworthy" Fan-Voted Award

Outlander (Starz)

Star Wars: The Force Awakens controversy

The film The Force Awakens screened too late for the vast majority of the Broadcast Film Critics Association to see it in time for consideration for the awards. But after what an email to members called "an unprecedented cry out" from its membership, the BFCA's board of directors called a "special referendum" on adding the movie to the 10 candidates for Best Picture, which it won. (A similar situation happened for the 6th Critics' Choice Awards in 2001, in which the film Cast Away was voted by referendum to be included among the nominees for Best Picture.) The BFCA faced immediate criticism, including from its own members, over what many saw as an attempt to increase ratings for the awards ceremony's broadcast on A&E (which, is 50% owned by Disney, the company behind Star Wars) on January 17.[3] Two members, Eric Melin (who runs Scene-Stealers.com, the film critic at the Lawrence Journal-World, and the president of the Kansas City Film Critics Circle), and Scott Renshaw of Salt Lake City Weekly, resigned in protest.

Melin, in an open letter, said: {{Quote|text="In order for a professional critics body to have integrity, nomination and voting guidelines must be consistent with the way they were laid out at the beginning of the process. Nominating Star Wars: The Force Awakens for Best Picture does not follow those guidelines, and re-ignites a loophole for this kind of thing to happen every year... Unlike the other nominations, this was not decided upon using a weighted ballot of all possibilities, and it smells like a desperate ploy to get better TV ratings. Additionally, your insistence on billing the Critic’s Choice Awards as the 'most accurate predictor of the Academy Awards' is antithetical to the purpose of having a 'critic’s choice' award at all. The awards should not serve as another TV marketing arm to the studios. Rather, it should represent the views and opinions of film critics, which is a very different group from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. As film criticism continues to be devalued and the lines between journalist, critic, and studio shill continue to be blurred, the only thing we have is our integrity, and this smacks of a marketing ploy. Believe me, I know because my day job is a social media marketer. What I am not is an employee of A&E Networks, and the only thing I have as a lowly paid film critic is the courage of my convictions."|author=Eric Melin |source=[4]}}

Similarly in another open letter, Scott Renshaw said: {{Quote|text="This decision has been a long time coming, but was made inevitable by the decision to change the voting process to allow Star Wars: Episode VII- The Force Awakens to be included as a nominee after the official nominating deadline. Irrespective of any precedent that may be invoked... it is obvious to me that this decision is based more on marketing value than making sure that the best films are included. If that were the case, the entire nomination process would have been opened up again to allow The Force Awakens to be considered in all categories. Any suggestion that this decision was made primarily for any reason other than to improve ratings for the awards broadcast feels disingenuous at best. An awards voting body has nothing to stand on but its integrity. I no longer feel my own personal integrity is consistent with ongoing membership in this organization."|author=Scott Renshaw |source=[5]}}{{better source|date=January 2016|reason=If this was a meaningful resignation, then certainly a more reputable source is available.}}

Films by multiple nominations and wins

{{col-begin}}{{col-1-of-2}}

The following twenty-five films received multiple nominations:

NominationsFilm
13
Fury Road
9 Carol
The Martian
The Revenant
8
Spotlight
7
The Big Short
6
The Hateful Eight
5 Bridge of Spies
Brooklyn
The Danish Girl
Jurassic World
Sicario
4
Room
3 Ex Machina
Inside Out
Joy
Impossible – Rogue Nation
Spy
Steve Jobs
Trainwreck
Trumbo
2 Black Mass
Furious 7
Love & Mercy
Sisters
Spectre
{{col-2-of-2}}

The following five films received multiple awards:

AwardsFilm
9 Fury Road
3 The Big Short
Spotlight
2 The Revenant
Room
{{col-end}}

See also

  • 6th Critics' Choice Television Awards

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/12/critics-choice-awards-nominations-2016-full-list-1201666326/ |title=Critics' Choice Awards Nominations: 'Mad Max' Leads Film; ABC, HBO, FX Networks & 'Fargo' Top TV |website=Deadline Hollywood |date=December 14, 2015 |accessdate=December 14, 2015}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.people.com/article/critics-choice-awards-nominations-mad-max|title=Critics' Choice Awards Mad About Mad Max: Fury Road as Nominations Are Announced|work=People|date=December 14, 2015 |first=Jodi |last=Guglielmi|accessdate=January 29, 2016}}
3. ^{{cite web |url=http://blogs.indiewire.com/criticwire/broadcast-film-critics-association-faces-criticism-for-adding-star-wars-the-force-awakens-to-best-picture-ballot-20151222|title=Broadcast Film Critics Association Faces Criticism for Adding 'The Force Awakens' to Best Picture Ballot |last=Adams |first=Sam |date=December 22, 2015 |website=Indiewire|accessdate=December 22, 2015 |quote=}}
4. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.scene-stealers.com/blogs/why-i-resigned-from-the-bfca-over-star-wars-the-force-awakens/ |title=WHY I RESIGNED FROM THE BFCA OVER "STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS" |last=Melin |first=Eric |date=December 22, 2015 |work=Scene Stealers |accessdate=December 22, 2015 |quote=}}
5. ^{{cite tweet|user=scottrenshaw|author=Scott Renshaw|number=679422886222819328|date=22 December 2015|title=Sent. Buh-bye, BFCA.|accessdate=December 22, 2015}}
{{BFCA Awards Chron}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Critics' Choice Awards, 20}}

2 : Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards|2015 film awards

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