China Daily

The Rider wins

-

Critics select Beijing-born director’s debut as best picture

NEW YORK — The National Society of Film Critics (a US film critic organizati­on) on Saturday chose Chloe Zhao’s low-budget debut feature, The Rider, as best picture of 2018.

Director Alfonso Cuaron’s black-and-white Roma period piece set in modern Mexico won the most awards — as best picture runner-up, best foreign-language film and for best cinematogr­aphy. Cuaron also got the award for best director.

The society of leading movie critics voted for Olivia Colman as best actress in The Favorite, and Ethan Hawke as best actor in First

Reformed. The top accolade for best supporting actor went to Steve Yeun of Burning, while Regina King of If Beale Street Could

Talk nabbed best supporting actress. About 40 of the society’s 64 members voted.

Best screenplay went to The

Death of Stalin, and best nonfiction film to Minding the Gap, a documentar­y directed by Bing Liu about the complex friendship among three skateboard­ing young men, including himself, in their hometown of Rockford, Illinois.

The film critics society was founded in 1966, electing its voting critics from newspapers and other major US media outlets. The 53rd annual awards were hosted by New York’s Film Society of Lincoln Center.

Justin Chang, the society’s chairman and the Los Angeles Times’ film critic, said that 2018 yielded “an embarrassm­ent of riches” among new movies, but

The Rider stood out among them — a contempora­ry western drama shot in the badlands of South Dakota. There, a family living in a trailer against the backdrop of the rodeo circuit struggles with autism, brain damage from a bronc riding competitio­n, drinking and gambling, but somehow endures.

The film, directed by a Beijingbor­n woman who was educated in the United States and lives here, “is a mixture of documentar­y realism and fiction”, Chang said. “She uses nonprofess­ional actors in a way that’s intimate and organic; it’s a heartbreak­ing movie with a lot of staying power.”

He noted that the society does not base its choices either on a film’s box office or its budget. “We care about the quality of the movies.”

The 2018 winners reflect this year’s wide ethnic and technical diversity in film production, including Burning, a South Korean mystery drama directed by Lee Chang-dong.

Roma, directed by the Mexicanbor­n Cuaron, has also been named best picture by the New York Film Critics Circle and the Los Angeles Film Critics Associatio­n.

“A lot of directors are rediscover­ing the striking, atmospheri­c properties of black-and-white cinema,” Chang said.

In Roma, Cuaron’s lavish visuals capture a young domestic worker in the Roma neighborho­od of Mexico City in the 1970s, exploding with domestic, social and political turmoil.

“It’s the critical hit of the season,” Chang said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong