The Rider tops Gotham Awards
Early film honours ramp up to Globes, Oscars
NEW YORK — In the first major soiree of Hollywood’s awards season, Chloe Zhao’s elegiac, lyrical western The Rider took best feature film at the 28th annual Gotham Awards.
It was a surprising, but far from baffling, conclusion to the Gothams, the New Yorkbased gala for independent film, held Monday night at Cipriani’s Wall Street in downtown Manhattan. The awards were generally spread around, including a pair of prizes for Bo Burnham’s coming-of-age directing debut Eighth Grade and Paul Schrader’s impassioned Catholic drama First Reformed.
But the night’s final honour went to The Rider, the second feature by the Chinese-born Zhao, despite no previous awards on the night and only one other nomination: an audience award nod alongside 14 other films. Some may have forgotten it was eligible. Having first premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2017, The Rider was nominated by the Gotham’s West Coast corollary, the Independent Film Spirit Awards, in February as one of last year’s best.
Zhao, too, wasn’t in attendance (she is prepping her next film). And few looked more surprised than the producers — Bert Hamelinck and Mollye Asher — who accepted the award. “This is going to be the worst acceptance speech,” stuttered Hamelinck.
Yet The Rider, filmed with Lakota cowboys on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Reservation, persevered over a few Oscar favourites, including the period romp The Favourite and Barry Jenkins’ If Beale Street Could Talk.
The Favourite still went home with two honorary awards: an award for its acting ensemble, led by Olivia Colman, Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz; and a tribute to Weisz.
Jenkins applauded the choice of The Rider with a standing ovation and a retweet of his earlier praise of the film, in which he called it “ravishing, sublime imagery paired with deeply earnest storytelling.”
Unpredictability pervaded the ceremony, especially for the winners, themselves.
When the Fred Rogers documentary Won’t You Be My Neighbor won the audience award (not typically a category for documentaries, but Won’t You Be My Neighbor proved a modest summer blockbuster), its director Morgan Neville was stunned, partly since he had already lost best documentary to RaMell Ross for Hale County This Morning, This Evening.
“To say this was a surprise would be an extreme understatement,” Neville said. “Since I didn’t know we were nominated.”
As an Oscar bellwether, the Gothams, presented by the not-for-profit Independent Film Project, are of little value. Their nominees are chosen by small juries of filmmakers and film critics before some of the fall’s films have been seen.
But in the early going, any momentum helps an underdog Oscar campaign, and that seemed especially true of First Reformed and Eighth Grade, both releases from A24, the indie distributor of Moonlight and Lady Bird.
First Reformed star Ethan Hawke took best actor and its 72-year-old writer-director Paul Schrader (Taxi Driver, Raging Bull) won best screenplay. Burnham’s Eighth Grade, starring 15-year-old Elsie Fisher, won for both breakthrough director and breakthrough actor.