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Topic created by Glenda Glamazon, December 15, 2001
Your one-stop shop for all the critics' and industry awards and top 10 lists for the films of 2001. Feel free to add any lists or awards you encounter.

Also, check out the best resource for awards and top 10s on the Web: Alex Fung's Film Page

  Thread Last Poster Posts Pages Last Post
Archive through December 27, 2001ILOVEmovies50 12-27-01  06:04 pm
Archive through January 07, 2002droogleader50 01-07-02  03:22 pm
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 03:26 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

But did they think she just made it all up???
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droogleader (john)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 04:28 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Maybe you're right. Perhaps the members of this group were able to see the celluloid for what it is. This is the same group that picked Persona as Best Picture and Bibi Anderson as Best Actress back in 67'. Such minds, it seems, enjoy cinema.
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droogleader (john)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 05:10 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Rosenbaum's list.

Good piece.
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Carlo (spiro_t_agnew)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 05:23 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Steve... I fail to see why Best Picture should necessarily win those other awards. Even though I haven't settled on a Best Picture for the year yet, I'm pretty sure it won't be Gosford Park. Yet I'm hard pressed to think of a better directed film this year.

In general, I think the Best Picture should come out with a writing or directing award as well. But I don't think it needs to be set in stone.
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droogleader (john)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 05:35 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

I don't think it has to be set in stone either but it just looks...well...kind of odd when the best picture isn't also considered either the best written or best directed film.
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 05:37 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

With very rare exceptions Carlo, my Writer-Director-Picture picks tend to line up pretty neatly. Are you saying a great performance can make a Best Picture unless those other key elements are also top notch? I can't think of a single example where that is true.
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 05:54 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Yes droog, that was a good piece by Rosenbaum. I particularily liked his line about A.I.'s engrossing but less-than-perfect elements; "this film makes the usual distinctions between success and failure seem trivial." Hear. Hear.
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Carlo (spiro_t_agnew)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 06:10 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Steve... I hate to give a mathematical example, because math doesn't really apply, but just imagine that Movie A has the second best direction, the second best script, and the second best performances of the year. But Movie B got best director, Movie C got best screenplay, and Movie D snagged Best Actor and Actress. Could not Movie A be justly considered the best overall film of the year?

Yeah, I know my example is a facile construction that has little to do with reality, but it can, and does, happen once in a long while.
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 06:19 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Carlo, I can't believe you just wrote that! I know it's still early in the week, but everything else is going to have to go some distance to best that chuckle. Was that a page torn from the Additive Theory of Cinema? J
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Carlo (spiro_t_agnew)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 08:25 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Believe me, I wrote that in the full knowledge that it is ridiculous, but I still think it illustrates my point somewhat.
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xavier (xavier)
Posted on Monday, January 07, 2002 - 11:31 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

What's up with those AFI awards??? I used to have a lot of respect for AFI-- now they're giving awards to TV sitcoms?

Huh? No wonder hardly any of the winners showed up.
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Glenda Glamazon (alison_aboutfilm)
Posted on Wednesday, January 16, 2002 - 06:52 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Okay, let's get this puppy back on track!

17th Annual Independent Spirit Awards Nominees
To be awarded March 23, 2002

Best Feature
  1. Hedwig And The Angry Inch (Fine Line) ~ Produced by Christine Vachon, Katie Roumel & Pamela Koffler
  2. L.I.E. (Lot 47) ~ Produced by René Bastian, Linda Moran & Michael Cuesta
  3. Memento (Newmarket) ~ Produced by Jennifer Todd & Suzanne Todd
  4. Things Behind The Sun (Showtime) ~ Produced by Daniel Hassid, Doug Mankoff, Robin Alper
  5. Waking Life (Fox Searchlight) ~ Produced by Anne Walker-McBay, Tommy Pallotta, Palmer West, Jonah Smith


Best First Feature (Over $500,000)
  1. The Anniversary Party (Fine Line) ~ Directed by Jennifer Jason Leigh & Alan Cumming
  2. The Believer (Fireworks) ~ Directed by Henry Bean
  3. Donnie Darko (Newmarket) ~ Directed by Richard Kelly
  4. Ghost World (MGM) ~ Directed by Terry Zwigoff
  5. In The Bedroom (Miramax) ~ Directed by Todd Field


John Cassavetes Award (Best Feature Made Under $500 000)
  1. Acts Of Worship ~ Directed by Rosemary Rodriguez; Produced by Nadia Leonelli, Fredrik Sundwall, Rosemary Rodriguez; Written by Rosemary Rodriguez
  2. Jackpot (Sony Pictures Classics) ~ Directed by Michael Polish; Produced by Mark Polish & Michael Polish; Written by Mark Polish & Michael Polish
  3. Kaaterskill Falls ~ Directed by Josh Apter & Peter Olsen; Produced by Josh Apter & Peter Olsen
  4. Punks (Urbanworld) ~ Directed by Patrik-Ian Polk; Produced by Patrik-Ian Polk, Tracey E. Edmonds, Michael McQuarn; Written by Patrik-Ian Polk
  5. Virgil Bliss ~ Directed by Joe Maggio; Produced by Joe Maggio & John Maggio; Written by Joe Maggio


Best Director
  1. Michael Cuesta, L.I.E. (Fine Line)
  2. Cheryl Dunye, Stranger Inside (HBO)
  3. Richard Linklater, Waking Life (Fox Searchlight)
  4. John Cameron Mitchell, Hedwig And The Angry Inch (Fine Line)
  5. Christopher Nolan, Memento (Newmarket)


Best Male Lead
  1. Brian Cox, L.I.E. (Lot 47)
  2. Ryan Gosling, The Believer (Fireworks)
  3. Jake Gyllenhaal, Donnie Darko (Newmarket)
  4. John Cameron Mitchell, Hedwig And The Angry Inch (Fine Line)
  5. Tom Wilkinson, In The Bedroom (Miramax)


Best Female Lead
  1. Kim Dickens, Things Behind The Sun(Showtime)
  2. Molly Parker, The Center Of The World (Artisan)
  3. Sissy Spacek, In The Bedroom (Miramax)
  4. Tilda Swinton, The Deep End (Fox Searchlight)
  5. Kerry Washington, Lift


Best Female Supporting
  1. Davenia McFadden, Stranger Inside (HBO)
  2. Carrie-Anne Moss, Memento (Newmarket)
  3. Summer Phoenix, The Believer (Fireworks)
  4. Tamara Tunie, The Caveman’s Valentine (Universal Focus)
  5. Uma Thurman, Tape (Lions Gate)


Best Male Supporting
  1. Steve Buscemi, Ghost World (MGM)
  2. Don Cheadle, Things Behind The Sun (Showtime)
  3. Billy Kay, L.I.E. (Lot 47)
  4. Garrett Morris, Jackpot (Sony Pictures Classics)
  5. John C. Reilly, The Anniversary Party (Fine Line)


Best Debut Performance
  1. Paul Franklin Dano, L.I.E. (Lot 47)
  2. Ana Reeder, Acts Of Worship
  3. Clint Jordan, Virgil Bliss
  4. Yolonda Ross, Stranger Inside (HBO)
  5. Ensemble (Hilary Howard, Anthony Leslie, Mitchell Riggs), Kaaterskill Falls


Best Screenplay
  1. Milo Addica & Will Rokos, Monster’s Ball (Lions Gate)
  2. Henry Bean, The Believer (Fireworks)
  3. Rob Festinger & Todd Field, In The Bedroom (Miramax)
  4. Richard Linklater, Waking Life (Fox Searclight)
  5. Christopher Nolan, Memento (Newmarket)


Best First Screenplay
  1. Ghost World (MGM) ~ Daniel Clowes & Terry Zwigoff
  2. Donnie Darko (Newmarket) ~ Richard Kelly
  3. The Anniversary Party (Fine Line) ~ Jennifer Jason Leigh & Alan Cumming
  4. Hedwig And The Angry Inch (Fine Line) ~ John Cameron Mitchell
  5. L.I.E. (Lot 47) ~ Stephen M. Ryder, Michael Cuesta & Gerald Cuesta


Best Cinematography
  1. Frank G. DeMarco, Hedwig And The Angry Inch (Fine Line)
  2. Peter Deming, Mulholland Drive (Universal Focus)
  3. W. Mott Hupfel III, The American Astronaut (Artistic License)
  4. Giles Nuttgens, The Deep End (Fox Searchlight)
  5. Wally Pfister, Memento (Newmarket)


Best Foreign Film
  1. Amélie (Miramax) ~ Directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet
  2. Amores Perros (Lions Gate) ~ Directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu
  3. Lumumba (Zeitgeist) ~ Directed by Raoul Peck
  4. Sexy Beast (Fox Searchlight) ~ Directed by Jonathan Glazer
  5. Together (IFC Films) ~ Directed by Lukas Moodysson


Best Documentary
  1. Dogtown And Z-Boys (Sony Pictures Classics) ~ Directed by Stacy Peralta
  2. Go Tigers! (IFC Films) ~ Directed by Kenneth A. Carlson
  3. Lalee’s Kin: The Legacy of Cotton (HBO) ~ Directed by Susan Froemke, Deborah Dickson, Albert Maysles
  4. Promises (Cowboy) ~ Directed by Justine Shapiro, B.Z. Goldberg, Carlos Bolado
  5. Scratch (Palm) ~ Directed by Doug Pray
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Carlo (spiro_t_agnew)
Posted on Sunday, January 20, 2002 - 06:19 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Attention: The Golden Globes are on tape delay on the West Coast. They are at 8 pm PT, 11 pm ET, by which time they will be close to done on the East Coast.

Therefore, you folks on the West Coast may wish to avoid newscasts and these boards between 5pm PT and the end of the show.
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Carlo (spiro_t_agnew)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 02:07 am:   Edit Post Print Post

The Golden Globes were something of a disappointment, I thought. They spread the love amongst a few too many films, I though, and the one that ended up with the most wins, A Beautiful Mind, is pretty mainstream entertainment... a safe but undeserving choice for that many Globes. Connelly, yes. Crowe, okay. Best Drama, no. Best Adapted Screenplay, no.

I will for once agree with Steve on this point... If you think Moulin Rouge is the best musical or comedy of the year, how in HELL do you not give a Globe to the director of that particular film? Instead, they gave it to Altman (which, taken on its own, I applaud), whose Gosford Park failed to beat Moulin Rouge in the comedy/musical category. Not that it belonged in that category in the first place... that might explain the voting anomaly.

I'm a bit annoyed to discover yet another film that I need to see stealthily released in an "Oscar Engagement"... Iris. I knew it was there; I had no idea it was making as many waves as it has.
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 10:50 am:   Edit Post Print Post

Nice to see Broadbent finally up there...for something. But with respect to the AFFAs, I'll be snubbing Iris (along with Charlotte Gray, Monster's Ball, and perhaps even Black Hawk Down and Gosford Park if I can't get to them this week) because of this cynical game the studios have been playing with their release patterns. There were too many 'dead' stretches last year (like any year) when fare like this could have played limited runs, then expanded. They did that successfully with Memento*, so howcum this increasingly ridiculous January/February feeding frenzy?

Some random observations:
  • Harrison Ford receiving a 'lifetime achievement' award--Opie now balder than ever--and yet Dick Clark mysteriously still the same--depressing.
  • When cutting away to audience reactions, wouldn't it be nice to see people who aren't themselves looking away at someone or something else? Saw way too many facelift lines and wads of ear hair last night.
  • Not even someone as statuesque and eclectic as Cameron Diaz could pull off that silly blue and red striped dress.
  • Did Lord of the Rings win ANYTHING?

* ...which ironically stands to be hurt MOST by it during this year's awards
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Jeff Vorndam (jeff)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 11:33 am:   Edit Post Print Post

At least Amelie didn't win.
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 11:45 am:   Edit Post Print Post

I predict Amelie will have a MUCH higher profile at the Oscars.
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Carlo (spiro_t_agnew)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 03:01 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Here, I'll go out on another limb and predict Amelie wins the Oscar, assuming it is eligible under the arcane rules.

Sarah Jessica Parker's dress was one of the most unfortunate garments I have ever seen. *meow* ;-)
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ClaudiaS (synchrogirl)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 03:52 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Carlo -- Wasn't it, though? -- mind sharing that saucer of cream? ;o)
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Glenda Glamazon (alison_aboutfilm)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 04:01 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Sela Ward was worse, IMO.
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ClaudiaS (synchrogirl)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 06:01 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

I finally saw a full shot of Sela, and yeah, that dress was gawdawful. A shame since she's normally so stylish -- and what was up with Sissy Spacek? I have no problem with the tux-look, but a shirt that fit and maybe a once over with a comb would have been in order? She looked like she'd just finished a catering job from hell
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Carlo (spiro_t_agnew)
Posted on Monday, January 21, 2002 - 06:06 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

The tired and worn-out caterer look! I knew I'd seen it somewhere before. Thank you... what an amazingly perfect description.
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Tuesday, January 22, 2002 - 07:16 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

Two sets of Guild nominations now in (some surprise omissions):

Directors:

Ron Howard - A Beautiful Mind
Peter Jackson - Lord of the Rings
Baz Luhrmann - Moulin Rouge
Christopher Nolan - Memento
Ridley Scott - Black Hawk Down

Cinematographers:

Bruno Delbonnel - Amelie
Andrew Lesnie - Lord of the Rings
Roger Deakins - The Man Who Wasn't There
Donald McAlpine - Moulin Rouge
John Schwartzman* - Pearl Harbor

* Huh??? If they were being entirely accurate, ILM!
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AdamL (adaml)
Posted on Wednesday, January 23, 2002 - 03:06 pm:   Edit Post Print Post


Quote:

I'm a bit annoyed to discover yet another film that I need to see stealthily released in an "Oscar Engagement"... Iris. I knew it was there; I had no idea it was making as many waves as it has.




I saw this on monday and have to say I was disappointed. The film basically relies entirely on the performances of the acting quartet - the script is almost an afterthought. However, given it's limitations it aint half bad and Dench and Broadbent deliver solid performances. The other potential Oscar nominee, Kate Winslet, had little to do in my book.
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lb (lighthouse_boy)
Posted on Wednesday, January 23, 2002 - 11:44 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

docscribe, did you notice only one of the directors nominated for the DGA is an American?
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xavier (xavier)
Posted on Thursday, January 24, 2002 - 01:27 am:   Edit Post Print Post

The Golden Glob (sic) Awards:

GOSFORD PARK is a comedy/musical? Sounds like the nominating committee saw the trailer and decided to skip the movie. I guess they thought it would add a touch of class to the show to have it as one of the nominees.

Is it really tasteful to thank someone for having been schizophrenic (a horrifying illness) so you could make a movie about his life? OK, so somebody made that faux pas once-- that's forgivable, but the same faux pas repeated endlessly all night long?

Get off that Australia/New Zealand thing, award people. That was hip like 20 years ago. Like, that Russell Crowe performance was a good effort but flawed. So you missed your chance when he deserved it for THE INSIDER. Do you really have to give him every award from now on to make up for it?

What? Nothing for the Streisand this year? Not even a best hubby award for Brolin? I guess you can only kiss somebody's derriere for so long before you begin to smell the s--t.
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Sunday, January 27, 2002 - 03:13 am:   Edit Post Print Post

Another Guild heard from: the Editors:

For a Feature Film (Dramatic):
  • Dan Hanley & Mike Hill - A Beautiful Mind
  • Pietro Scalia - Black Hawk Down
  • Richard Francis-Bruce - Harry Potter And The Sorcerer's Stone
  • John Gilbert - The Lord Of The Rings
  • Dody Dorn - Memento

For a Feature Film (Comedy or Musical):
  • Hervé Schneid - Amélie
  • Tim Squyres - Gosford Park
  • Jim Stewart - Monsters, Inc.
  • Jill Bilcock - Moulin Rouge
  • Dylan Tichenor - The Royal Tenenbaums
  • Sim Evan Jones - Shrek

For a Documentary:
  • Angelo Corrao - Chop Suey
  • Joshua Waletzky - The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition
  • Juliana Parroni - New York: A Documentary Film - Episode 7 "The City And The World"
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Thursday, January 31, 2002 - 05:52 am:   Edit Post Print Post

The SAG nominations:

Leading Actor
  • Russell Crowe - A Beautiful Mind
  • Kevin Kline - Life as a House
  • Sean Penn - I Am Sam
  • Denzel Washington - Training Day
  • Tom Wilkinson - In The Bedroom

Leading Actress
  • Halle Berry - Monster's Ball
  • Jennifer Connelly - A Beautiful Mind
  • Judi Dench - Iris
  • Sissy Spacek - In The Bedroom
  • Renee Zellweger - Bridget Jones' Diary

Supporting Actor
  • Jim Broadbent - Iris
  • Hayden Christensen - Life as a House
  • Ethan Hawke - Training Day
  • Ben Kingsley - Sexy Beast
  • Ian Mckellen - Lord of the Rings

Supporting Actress
  • Cate Blanchett - Bandits
  • Judi Dench - The Shipping News
  • Cameron Diaz - Vanilla Sky
  • Dakota Fanning - I Am Sam
  • Helen Mirren - Gosford Park

Best Ensemble
  • A Beautiful Mind
  • Gosford Park
  • In the Bedroom
  • Moulin Rouge
  • Lord of the Rings
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Thursday, February 07, 2002 - 09:42 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

And now the Writers:

Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen
  • Gosford Park - Julian Fellows
  • The Man Who Wasn’t There - Joel Coen & Ethan Coen
  • Monster’s Ball - Milo Addica & Will Rokos
  • Moulin Rouge - Baz Luhrmann & Craig Pearce
  • The Royal Tenenbaums - Wes Anderson & Owen Wilson

Best Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published
  • A Beautiful Mind - Akiva Goldsman
  • Black Hawk Down - Ken Nolan
  • Bridget Jones’s Diary - Helen Fielding, Andrew Davies & Richard Curtis
  • Ghost World - Daniel Clowes & Terry Zwigoff
  • The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring - Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens & Peter Jackson
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Alex Dr_evil (drevil)
Posted on Thursday, February 07, 2002 - 09:48 pm:   Edit Post Print Post


Quote:

Supporting Actress ..

..Judi Dench - The Shipping News




...Because nothing screams 'award' like wrinkly, geriatric lesbians in Newfoundland.
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Steve Badgley (docscribe)
Posted on Thursday, February 07, 2002 - 09:56 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

...or a seat on town council.
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Glenda Glamazon (alison_aboutfilm)
Posted on Tuesday, February 12, 2002 - 01:27 pm:   Edit Post Print Post

74th Annual Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences Awards

Best Motion Picture Of The Year
Nominees:
A Beautiful Mind (Universal)
Gosford Park (USA Films)
In The Bedroom (Miramax)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)
Moulin Rouge (Fox)

Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role
Nominees:
Russell Crowe, A Beautiful Mind (Universal)
Sean Penn, I Am Sam (New Line)
Will Smith, Ali (Columbia)
Denzel Washington, Training Day (Warner Bros.)
Tom Wilkinson, In The Bedroom (Miramax)

Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role
Nominees:
Halle Berry, Monster's Ball (Lions Gate)
Judi Dench, Iris (Miramax)
Nicole Kidman, Moulin Rouge (Fox)
Sissy Spacek, In The Bedroom (Miramax)
Renée Zellweger, Bridget Jones's Diary (Miramax)

Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role
Nominees:
Jim Broadbent, Iris (Miramax)
Ethan Hawke, Training Day (Warner Bros.)
Ben Kingsley, Sexy Beast (Fox Searchlight)
Ian McKellen, The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)
Jon Voight, Ali (Columbia)

Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role
Nominees:
Jennifer Connelly, A Beautiful Mind (Universal)
Helen Mirren, Gosford Park (USA Films)
Maggie Smith, Gosford Park (USA Films)
Marisa Tomei, In The Bedroom (Miramax)
Kate Winslet, Iris (USA Films)

Best Achievement in Directing
Nominees:
Robert Altman, Gosford Park (USA Films)
Ron Howard, A Beautiful Mind (Universal)
Peter Jackson, The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)
David Lynch, Mulholland Dr. (Universal Focus)
Ridley Scott, Black Hawk Down (Columbia)

Best Screenplay Written Directly For The Screen
Nominees:
Amélie (Miramax)--Guillaume Laurant & Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Gosford Park (USA Films)--Julian Fellowes
Memento (Newmarket)--Christopher Nolan
Monster's Ball (Lions Gate)--Milo Addica & Will Rokos
The Royal Tenenbaums (Touchstone)--Wes Anderson & Owen Wilson

Best Screenplay Based On Material Previously Produced Or Published
Nominees:
A Beautiful Mind (Universal)--Akiva Goldsman
Ghost World (MGM)--Daniel Clowes & Terry Zwigoff
In The Bedroom (Miramax)--Rob Festinger & Todd Field
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)--Fran Walsh & Philippa Boyens & Peter Jackson
Shrek (DreamWorks)--Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio, Joe Stillman & Roger S.H. Schulman

Best Animated Feature Film Of The Year
Nominees:
Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (Paramount)
Monsters, Inc. (Disney)
Shrek (DreamWorks)

Best Achievement in Art Direction
Nominees:
Amélie (Miramax)--Aline Bonetto
Gosford Park (USA Films)--Stephen Altman
Harry Potter And The Sorcerer's Stone (Warner Bros.)--Stuart Craig
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)--Grant Major
Moulin Rouge (Fox)--Catherine Martin

Best Achievement in Cinematography
Nominees:
Amélie (Miramax)--Bruno Delbonnel
Black Hawk Down (Columbia)--Slawomir Idziak
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)--Andrew Lesnie
The Man Who Wasn't There (USA Films)--Roger Deakins
Moulin Rouge (Fox)--Don McAlpine

Best Achievement in Costume Design
Nominees:
The Affair Of The Necklace (Warner Bros.)--Milena Canonero
Gosford Park (USA Films)--Jenny Beavan
Harry Potter And The Sorcerer's Stone (Warner Bros.)--Judianna Makovsky
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)--Ngila Dickson
Moulin Rouge (Fox)--Catherine Martin and Angus Strathie

Best Achievement in Documentary Features
Nominees:
Children Underground
Lalee's Kin: The Legacy
Murder On A Sunday Morning
Promises
War Photographer

Best Achievement in Documentary Short Subjects
Nominees:
Artists And Orphans: A True Drama
Sing!
Thoth

Best Achievement in Film Editing
Nominees:
A Beautiful Mind (Universal)--Mike Hill, Dan Hanley
Black Hawk Down (Columbia)--Pietro Scalia
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)--John Gilbert
Memento (Newmarket)--Dody Dorn
Moulin Rouge (Fox)--Jill Bilcock

Best Foreign Language Film of the Year
Nominees:
Amélie--France
Elling--Norway
Lagaan--India
No Man's Land--Bosnia and Herzegovina
Son Of The Bride--Argentina

Best Achievement in Makeup
Nominees:
A Beautiful Mind (Universal)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)
Moulin Rouge (Fox)

Best Achievement in Music in connection with Motion Pictures (Original Score)
Nominees:
A.I. Artificial Intelligence (DreamWorks)--John Williams
A Beautiful Mind (Universal)--James Horner
Harry Potter And The Sorcerer's Stone (Warner Bros.)--John Williams
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)--Howard Shore
Monsters, Inc. (Disney)--Randy Newman

Best Achievement in Music in connection with Motion Pictures (Original Song)
Nominees:
"If I Didn't Have You", Monsters, Inc. (Disney)
"May It Be", The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)
"There You'll Be", Pearl Harbor (Touchstone)
"Until...", Kate & Leopold (Miramax)
"Vanilla Sky...", Vanilla Sky (Paramount)

Best Achievement in Animated Short Films
Nominees:
Fifty Percent Grey
For The Birds
Give Up Yer Aul Sins
Strange Invaders
Stubble Trouble

Best Achievement in Live Action Short Films
Nominees:
The Accountant
Copy Shop
Gregor's Greatest Invention
A Man Thing
Speed For Thespians

Best Achievement in Sound
Nominees:
Amélie
Black Hawk Down (Columbia)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)
Moulin Rouge (Fox)
Pearl Harbor (Touchstone)

Best Achievement in Sound Editing
Nominees:
Monsters, Inc. (Disney)
Pearl Harbor (Touchstone)

Best Achievement in Visual Effects
Nominees:
A.I. Artificial Intelligence (DreamWorks)
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (New Line)
Pearl Harbor (Touchstone)

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