New York Film Critics name Israeli-Palestinian “No Other Land” best documentary in annual awards (Live updates)
The New York Film Critics Circle, one of the nation’s oldest and most venerated critics’ groups, is kicking movie awards season into high gear Tuesday as they select their choices for the best of 2024.
The group, comprised of roughly 50 print and online movie reviewers based in the city, is frequently the first major critics’ group to announce its best-of choices for the year. Their winners are chosen via ballot, and on a category-by-category basis; the awards have traditionally taken a number of hours to reveal.
The group selected as its best non-fiction film winner “No Other Land,” an Israel-Palestinian collaboration directed by Basel Adra, Hamdan Ballal, Yuval Abraham and Rachel Szor. Longtime film critic J. Hoberman recently called it the year’s best film in Artforum, describing it as an “explication of forced expulsion on the occupied West Bank made mostly on amateur digital video” about the “two-decade legal battle over the fate of an agrarian area with some twenty Palestinian villages.” The film is currently without distribution in North America.
Kieran Culkin was named best supporting actor for his role in “A Real Pain,” and best animated film went to “Flow,” by Latvian director Gints Zilbalodis.
The best first film prize went to “Janet Planet,” an A24 production hellmed by Annie Baker, and the award for best cinematography went to Jomo Fray for their first-person viewpoints of “Nickel Boys.”
Full list of NYFCC winners (in progress)
- Film: TBD
- Director: TBD
- Actor: TBD
- Actress: TBD
- Supporting Actor: Kieran Culkin, “A Real Pain” (Searchlight Pictures)
- Supporting Actress: TBD
- Screenplay: TBD
- Animated Film: “Flow” (Janus Films/Sideshow)
- Cinematography: “Nickel Boys,” Jomo Fray (Amazon MGM Studios)
- First Film: “Janet Planet,” Annie Baker (A24)
- International: TBD
- Non-Fiction Film: “No Other Land” (No current distributor)
- Special mention: TBD
- Special Award: TBD
The group launched in 1935, less than a decade after the advent of the Academy Awards, and has frequently positioned itself as an antidote to the Oscars’ choices and, paradoxically, a bellwether of what films may factor into the following year’s Oscar race.
“Compared with the Oscars, the group’s best picture track record speaks for itself: ‘Citizen Kane’ over ‘How Green Was My Valley’; ‘A Clockwork Orange’ over ‘The French Connection’; ‘Day for Night’ over ‘The Sting’; ‘Goodfellas’ over ‘Dances with Wolves,'” the organization touts. “Since 1935, the Academy Awards have given best picture to 43% of the NYFCC’s picks.”
It’s been more than a decade since the NYFCC pick for the year’s best movie has matched up with Oscar’s choice — 2011’s “The Artist.” Since then, most of their picks have at least been nominated for the best picture Academy Award, including last year’s selection of Martin Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon.”
The group’s choices for acting prizes can be even further out of the mainstream, with some of their recent citations going to Regina Hall, best actress in 2018 for “Support the Girls,” Ethan Hawke, best actor in 2018 for “First Reformed,” and Charles Melton, best supporting actor in 2023 for “May December.” On the other hand, the NYFCC made waves in 1998 when they awarded their best actress prize to Cameron Diaz for the gross-out comedy “There’s Something About Mary.”
Their awards will be handed out in January.