Carol, the 1950s’ lesbian romance story adapted by Phyllis Nagy from the Patricia Highsmith novel “The Price of Salt” and directed by Todd Haynes, dominated the New York Film Critics Circle Awards with four honors: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay and Best Cinematographer (Edward Lachman, ASC).
In a recent interview and as reported in a profile of Haynes (SHOOT, 10/23), the director said that Carol had “a long gestation period before I came on board.” He recalled first reading the novel and the script in May 2013. “I was really taken by everything about it. Cate Blanchett was already attached to it. Sandy Powell was attached as costume designer. Cate and Sandy were amazing draws for me. I found the novel to be something special and unique, the only one outside Highsmith’s oeuvre of crime novels. It’s simply an incredibly compelling story of two women falling in love. Some of the notes I gave Phyllis [screenwriter Nagy] were about restoring a little bit of the tensions and anxieties that I had found in the novel. In trying to get the project financed earlier, the screenplay had defangled some of what was in the novel a bit. Phyllis and I wound up with a great working relationship.”
The cited attraction of working with Blanchett represented a return engagement for Haynes. Blanchett delivered an acclaimed performance in I’m Not There, director/co-writer Haynes’ biographical musical film inspired by the life and work of singer-songwriter Bob Dylan.
However, the NY Film Critics bestowed this year’s Best Actress honor upon Saoirse Ronan for her portryal of an Irish immigrant in Brooklyn while Michael Keaton earned Best Actor distinction for his performance as a Boston Globe journalist in Spotlight.
Best Supporting Actor and Supporting Actress honors went, respectively, to Mark Rylance (as Soviet spy Rudolf Abel) for Bridge of Spies and Kristen Stewart (portraying an actor's assistant) for Clouds of Sils Maria.
Inside Out won for Best Animated Film. In Jackson Heights was named Best Non-Fiction Film (Documentary). Timbuktu was designated the Best Foreign Film. And taking the Best First Film honor was László Nemes’ Son of Saul.
The awards will be handed out in a ceremony in January. Here’s a rundown of NY Film Critics Circle Award winners:
Best Picture
Carol
Best Director
Todd Haynes, Carol
Best Screenplay
Carol
Best Actress
Saoirse Ronan, Brooklyn
Best Actor
Michael Keaton, Spotlight
Best Supporting Actress
Kristen Stewart, Clouds of Sils Maria
Best Supporting Actor
Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies
Best Cinematographer
Edward Lachman, Carol
Best Animated Film
Inside Out
Best Non-Fiction Film (Documentary)
In Jackson Heights
Best Foreign Film
Timbuktu
Best First Film
László Nemes, Son of Saul
Special Award
William Becker and Janus Films (Becker, who made Janus a leading art-house distributor, passed away in September.)
Special Award
Ennio Morricone, composer