2013 National Society of Film Critics Awards

The 48th National Society of Film Critics Awards, given on 4 January 2014, honored the best in film for 2013.[1][2]

48th NSFC Awards

January 4, 2014


Best Film:
Inside Llewyn Davis

Winners

Film titles are listed in order of placings:

Coen brothers, Best Director winners
Oscar Isaac, Best Actor winner
Cate Blanchett, Best Actress winner
James Franco, Best Supporting Actor
Jennifer Lawrence, Best Supporting Actress winner
Richard Linklater, Best Screenplay co-winner

Best Picture

1. Inside Llewyn Davis
2. American Hustle
3. 12 Years a Slave
3. Her

Best Director

1. Joel Coen and Ethan Coen Inside Llewyn Davis
2. Alfonso Cuarón Gravity
3. Steve McQueen 12 Years a Slave

Best Actor

1. Oscar Isaac Inside Llewyn Davis
2. Chiwetel Ejiofor 12 Years a Slave
3. Robert Redford All Is Lost

Best Actress

1. Cate Blanchett Blue Jasmine
2. Brie Larson Short Term 12
3. Adèle Exarchopoulos Blue Is the Warmest Colour
3. Julie Delpy Before Midnight

Best Supporting Actor

1. James Franco Spring Breakers
2. Jared Leto Dallas Buyers Club
3. Barkhad Abdi Captain Phillips

Best Supporting Actress

1. Jennifer Lawrence American Hustle
2. Lupita Nyong'o 12 Years a Slave
3. Léa Seydoux Blue Is the Warmest Colour
3. Sally Hawkins Blue Jasmine

Best Screenplay

1. Richard Linklater, Ethan Hawke, and Julie Delpy Before Midnight
2. Joel Coen and Ethan Coen Inside Llewyn Davis
3. Eric Warren Singer and David O. Russell American Hustle

Best Cinematography

1. Bruno Delbonnel Inside Llewyn Davis
2. Emmanuel Lubezki Gravity
3. Phedon Papamichael Nebraska

Best Non-Fiction Film

1. The Act of Killing (TIE)
1. At Berkeley (TIE)
2. Leviathan

Best Foreign-Language Film

1. Blue Is the Warmest Colour
2. A Touch of Sin
3. The Great Beauty

Film Heritage Awards

  1. To the Museum of Modern Art, for its wide-ranging retrospective of the films of Allan Dwan.
  2. Too Much Johnson, the surviving reels from Orson Welles' first professional film. Discovered by Cinemazero (Pordenone) and Cineteca del Friuli, funded by the National Film Preservation Foundation, and restored by the George Eastman Museum.
  3. The British Film Institute for restorations of Alfred Hitchcock's nine silent features.
  4. To the DVD American Treasures from the New Zealand Film Archive.

References

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