The San Francisco Film Critics Circle completed a major market circle by naming Boyhood the year’s Best Picture–a mantle earlier bestowed upon director/writer Richard Linklater’s film by both the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the New York Film Critics Circle.
Boyhood won a total of four awards from San Francisco Film Critics–the others being for Best Director (Linklater), Best Editing for Sandra Adair, and Best Supporting Actress for Patricia Arquette.
Earning three wins was Birdman: Best Actor for Michael Keaton, Best Supporting Actor for Edward Norton, and Best Original Screenplay for the film’s director, Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu, Nicolas Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris and Armando Bo.
The S.F. Film Critics tabbed The Lego Movie as Best Animated Feature, Ida as Best Foreign Language Picture, and Citizenfour as Best Documentary.
Here are the winners of the 2014 film awards by the San Francisco Film Critics Circle.
Best Picture
Boyhood
Best Director
Richard Linklater, Boyhood
Best Actor
Michael Keaton, Birdman
Best Actress
Julianne Moore, Still Alice
Best Supporting Actor
Edward Norton, Birdman
Best Supporting Actress
Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
Best Screenplay, Original
Birdman, Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu; Nicolas Giacobone; Alexander Dinelaris; Armando Bo
Best Screenplay, Adapted
Inherent Vice, Paul Thomas Anderson
Best Cinematography
Ida, Ryszard Lenczewski; Lukasz Zal
Best Production Design
The Grand Budapest Hotel, Adam Stockhausen
Best Editing
Boyhood, Sandra Adair
Best Animated Feature
The Lego Movie
Best Foreign Language Picture
Ida
Best Documentary
Citizenfour
Marlon Riggs Award for courage & vision in the Bay Area film community
Joel Shepard, film/video curator for the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco
Special Citation for under-appreciated independent cinema
The One I Love
Droga5 Appoints Emma Montgomery As Global Chief Strategy Officer
Creative agency network Droga5 has appointed Emma Montgomery as global chief strategy officer. She is the third global appointment for the agency this year, with Pelle Sjoenell named worldwide chief creative officer this past March, and global CEO Mark Green recently appointed this fall. Montgomery will be responsible for connecting and supercharging Droga5โs strategy and creative offerings globally. She will be based in its headquarters in New York City.
โEmma is a world-class strategic leader and authority that Iโve long admired and dreamt of being partners-in-crime with,โ said Sjoenell. โHer work inspires the creativity that connects people and brands in ways that move business and culture forward, so Iโm excited to finally be able to work with her alongside Mark, and to see her lead and further strengthen our leadership and strategy teams around the world.โ
Montgomery joins Droga5 after serving as CEO of DDB Chicago. Sheโs been in the industry for over 20 years, and has served in several high-level leadership positions throughout her career, including as president and CSO of Leo Burnett Chicago, global CSO of TBWA, and CEO of Leo Burnett Australia. Sheโs also worked across a breadth of categories and multiple global clients such as Kraft, Aldi, Diageo and Molson Coors, among many others, including challenger brands and startups.
โIโm excited to join Droga5 and have the opportunity to help carve out a new path for the brand globally, building on its tremendous legacy of creative leadership,โ said Montgomery. โThe potential of Droga5, combined with the possibilities of Accenture Song, was too exciting to pass up. No other agency has what they have, and as marketing shifts, the chance to make creativity a genuine... Read More