The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Boseman, ‘First Cow’ among Gotham nominees

- Photos and text from The Associated Press

More films, not less, were submitted to the Gothams this year. Some 500films were submitted compared to 380 last year.

NEW YORK » Awards season, such as it is this year, got formally underway Thursday with the first notable film nomination­s yet announced in a pandemicma­rred movie year. The Gotham Awards, presented by the Independen­t Filmmaker Project, put forward five films, all directed by women, for best feature film, and a posthumous acting nod for Chadwick Boseman.

Kelly Reichardt’s “First Cow” led all films in nomination­s for the 30th annual Gotham Awards with four nods, including best film, best screenplay, best actor for John Magaro and breakthrou­gh actor for Orion Lee. The film, a Western fable about two aimless travelers in Oregon Territory of the 1820s, was released in theaters by A24 in early March, shortly before cinemas closed nationwide, and on video-on-demand in July.

The other nominees for best film are Eliza Hittman’s teenage abortion drama “Never Rarely Sometimes Always”; Chloe Zhao’s “Nomadland,” starring Frances McDormand as an itinerant widow living in her van; Kitty Green’s “The Assistant,” a Harvey Weinstein-inspired drama about a junior assistant to a movie mogul; and Natalie Erika James’ horror thriller “Relic.”

Boseman, who died in August at 43 from colon cancer, was nominated for his performanc­e in the upcoming Netflix adaptation of August Wilson’s 1982 play, “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.” Early buzz for the performanc­e, Boseman’s final one, has boosted the expectatio­n that he will land a posthumous Academy Award nomination.

Alongside Boseman and Magaro, the acting nominees are Riz Ahmed (“Sound of Metal”), Jude Law (“The Nest”) and

Jesse Plemons (“I’m Thinking of Ending Things”).

Up for best actress are Nicole Beharie (“Miss Juneteenth”), Jessie Buckley (“I’m Thinking of Ending Things”), YuhJung Youn (“Minari”), Carrie Coon (“The Nest”) and Frances McDormand (“Nomadland”).

The Gothams honor independen­t film, with nominees selected by panels of critics. They’re typically held in late autumn but, like most awards, have been pushed back this year following the two-month postponeme­nt of the Oscars to April 25. The ceremony is set for Jan. 11 for what organizers are calling a hybrid format of virtual interactiv­e tables.

More films, not less, were submitted to the Gothams this year. Some 500 films were submitted compared to 380 the year before.

Up for best documentar­y are “76 Days,” “City Hall,” “Our Time Machine,” “A Thousand Cuts” and “Time.” The nominees for breakthrou­gh director are Radha Blank, (“The Forty-Year-Old Version”), Channing Godfrey Peoples (“Miss Juneteenth”), Alex Thompson (“Saint Frances”), Carlo Mirabella-Davis (“Swallow”), and Andrew Patterson (“The Vast of Night”).

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 ?? COURTESY OF A24 ?? Orion Lee, left, and and John Magaro in a scene from “First Cow.”
COURTESY OF A24 Orion Lee, left, and and John Magaro in a scene from “First Cow.”

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