21st Critics' Choice Awards (original) (raw)

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2016 event

21st Critics' Choice Awards
Date January 17, 2016
Site Barker Hangar, Santa Monica, California, United States
Hosted by T.J. Miller
Highlights
Most awards Film:Mad Max: Fury Road (9)Television:Fargo (4)
Most nominations Film:Mad Max: Fury Road (13)Television:Fargo (8)
Best Picture Spotlight
Best Comedy Series Master of None
Best Drama Series Mr. Robot
Best Movie Made for Television or Limited Series Fargo
Best Animation Series BoJack Horseman
Website www.criticschoice.com
Television/radio coverage
Network A&E / Lifetime / LMN
20th22nd

The 21st Critics' Choice Awards were presented on January 17, 2016 at the Barker Hangar at the Santa Monica Airport, honoring the finest achievements of filmmaking and television programming in 2015.[1] The ceremony was simulcast on A&E, Lifetime and LMN, and hosted by T.J. Miller.[2] The nominees were announced on December 14, 2015.[3]

This year marked the first time the awards were combined with the Critics' Choice Television Awards into one event onward.[4]

Winners and nominees

[edit]

George Miller, Best Director winner

Leonardo DiCaprio, Best Actor winner

Brie Larson, Best Actress winner

Sylvester Stallone, Best Supporting Actor winner

Alicia Vikander, Best Supporting Actress winner

Jacob Tremblay, Best Young Actor/Actress winner

Tom McCarthy, Best Original Screenplay co-winner

Adam McKay, Best Adapted Screenplay co-winner

Tom Hardy, Best Actor in an Action Movie winner

Charlize Theron, Best Actress in an Action Movie winner

Christian Bale, Best Actor in a Comedy Movie winner

Amy Schumer, Best Actress in a Comedy Movie winner

Ennio Morricone, Best Score winner

Best Picture Spotlight The Big Short Bridge of Spies Brooklyn Carol Mad Max: Fury Road The Martian The Revenant Room Sicario Star Wars: The Force Awakens Best Director George MillerMad Max: Fury Road Todd HaynesCarol Alejandro G. IñárrituThe Revenant Tom McCarthySpotlight Ridley ScottThe Martian Steven SpielbergBridge of Spies
Best Actor Leonardo DiCaprioThe Revenant as Hugh Glass Bryan CranstonTrumbo as Dalton Trumbo Matt DamonThe Martian as Mark Watney Johnny DeppBlack Mass as James "Whitey" Bulger Michael FassbenderSteve Jobs as Steve Jobs Eddie RedmayneThe Danish Girl as Lili Elbe / Einar Wegener Best Actress Brie LarsonRoom as Joy "Ma" Newsome Cate BlanchettCarol as Carol Aird Jennifer LawrenceJoy as Joy Mangano Charlotte Rampling45 Years as Kate Mercer Saoirse RonanBrooklyn as Eilis Lacey Charlize TheronMad Max: Fury Road as Imperator Furiosa
Best Supporting Actor Sylvester StalloneCreed as Rocky Balboa Paul DanoLove & Mercy as Brian Wilson Tom HardyThe Revenant as John Fitzgerald Mark RuffaloSpotlight as Michael Rezendes Mark RylanceBridge of Spies as Rudolf Abel Michael Shannon99 Homes as Rick Carver Best Supporting Actress Alicia VikanderThe Danish Girl as Gerda Wegener Jennifer Jason LeighThe Hateful Eight as Daisy Domergue Rooney MaraCarol as Therese Belivet Rachel McAdamsSpotlight as Sacha Pfeiffer Helen MirrenTrumbo as Hedda Hopper Kate WinsletSteve Jobs as Joanna Hoffman
Best Young Actor/Actress Jacob TremblayRoom as Jack Newsome Abraham AttahBeasts of No Nation as Agu RJ CylerMe and Earl and the Dying Girl as Earl Jackson Shameik MooreDope as Malcolm Adekanbi Milo ParkerMr. Holmes as Roger Munro Best Acting Ensemble Spotlight The Big Short The Hateful Eight Straight Outta Compton Trumbo
Best Original Screenplay Tom McCarthy and Josh SingerSpotlight Matt Charman and Ethan Coen & Joel CoenBridge of Spies Pete Docter, Meg LeFauve, and Josh CooleyInside Out Alex GarlandEx Machina Quentin TarantinoThe Hateful Eight Best Adapted Screenplay Adam McKay and Charles RandolphThe Big Short Emma DonoghueRoom Drew GoddardThe Martian Nick HornbyBrooklyn Aaron SorkinSteve Jobs
Best Animated Feature Inside Out Anomalisa The Good Dinosaur The Peanuts Movie Shaun the Sheep Movie
Best Documentary Feature Amy Cartel Land Going Clear He Named Me Malala The Look of Silence Where to Invade Next Best Foreign Language Film Son of Saul (Saul fia) • Hungary The Assassin (Cìkè Niè Yǐnniáng) • China / Hong Kong / Taiwan Goodnight Mommy (Ich seh, Ich seh) • Austria MustangFrance / Germany / Turkey The Second Mother (Que Horas Ela Volta?) • Brazil
Best Action Movie Mad Max: Fury Road Furious 7 Jurassic World Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation Sicario
Best Actor in an Action Movie Tom HardyMad Max: Fury Road as Max Rockatansky Daniel CraigSpectre as James Bond Tom CruiseMission: Impossible – Rogue Nation as Ethan Hunt Chris PrattJurassic World as Owen Grady Paul RuddAnt-Man as Scott Lang / Ant-Man Best Actress in an Action Movie Charlize TheronMad Max: Fury Road as Imperator Furiosa Emily BluntSicario as Kate Macer Rebecca FergusonMission: Impossible – Rogue Nation as Ilsa Faust Bryce Dallas HowardJurassic World as Claire Dearing Jennifer LawrenceThe Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 as Katniss Everdeen
Best Comedy Movie The Big Short Inside Out Joy Sisters Spy Trainwreck
Best Actor in a Comedy Movie Christian BaleThe Big Short as Michael Burry Steve CarellThe Big Short as Mark Baum Robert De NiroThe Intern as Ben Whittaker Bill HaderTrainwreck as Dr. Aaron Conners Jason StathamSpy as Rick Ford Best Actress in a Comedy Movie Amy SchumerTrainwreck as Amy Townsend Tina FeySisters as Kate Ellis Jennifer LawrenceJoy as Joy Mangano Melissa McCarthySpy as Susan Cooper Lily TomlinGrandma as Elle Reid
Best Sci-Fi/Horror Movie Ex Machina It Follows Jurassic World Mad Max: Fury Road The Martian
Best Art Direction Colin Gibson (Production Designer), Lisa Thompson (Set Decorator) – Mad Max: Fury Road Judy Becker (Production Designer), Heather Loeffler (Set Decorator) – Carol Arthur Max (Production Designer), Celia Bobak (Set Decorator) – The Martian François Séguin (Production Designer), Jenny Oman and Louise Tremblay (Set Decorators) – Brooklyn Eve Stewart (Production Designer), Michael Standish (Set Decorator) – The Danish Girl Adam Stockhausen (Production Designer), Rena DeAngelo (Set Decorator) – Bridge of Spies Best Cinematography Emmanuel LubezkiThe Revenant Roger DeakinsSicario Edward LachmanCarol Robert RichardsonThe Hateful Eight John SealeMad Max: Fury Road Dariusz WolskiThe Martian
Best Costume Design Jenny BeavanMad Max: Fury Road Paco DelgadoThe Danish Girl Odile Dicks-MireauxBrooklyn Sandy PowellCarol Sandy Powell – Cinderella Best Editing Margaret SixelMad Max: Fury Road Hank CorwinThe Big Short Tom McArdleSpotlight Stephen MirrioneThe Revenant Pietro ScaliaThe Martian
Best Score Ennio MorriconeThe Hateful Eight Carter BurwellCarol Jóhann JóhannssonSicario Ryuichi Sakamoto and Alva NotoThe Revenant Howard ShoreSpotlight Best Song "See You Again" – Furious 7 "Love Me like You Do" – Fifty Shades of Grey "One Kind of Love" – Love & Mercy "Simple Song #3" – Youth "Til It Happens to You" – The Hunting Ground "Writing's on the Wall" – Spectre
Best Hair and Makeup Mad Max: Fury Road Black Mass Carol The Danish Girl The Hateful Eight The Revenant Best Visual Effects Mad Max: Fury Road Ex Machina Jurassic World The Martian The Revenant The Walk

Jeffrey Tambor, Best Actor in a Comedy Series winner

Rachel Bloom, Best Actress in a Comedy Series winner

Andre Braugher, Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series winner

Mayim Bialik, Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series winner

Rami Malek, Best Actor in a Drama Series winner

Carrie Coon, Best Actress in a Drama Series winner

Christian Slater, Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series winner

Constance Zimmer, Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series winner

Idris Elba, Best Actor in a Movie Made for Television or Limited Series winner

Kirsten Dunst, Best Actress in a Movie Made for Television or Limited Series winner

Jesse Plemons, Best Supporting Actor in a Movie Made for Television or Limited Series winner

Jean Smart, Best Supporting Actress in a Movie Made for Television or Limited Series winner

Timothy Olyphant, Best Guest Actor/Actress in a Comedy Series winner

Margo Martindale, Best Guest Actor/Actress in a Drama Series winner

James Lipton, Best Reality Show Host winner

Best Series
Best Comedy Series Best Drama Series
Master of None (Netflix) Black-ish (ABC) Catastrophe (Amazon) Jane the Virgin (The CW) The Last Man on Earth (Fox) Transparent (Amazon) You're the Worst (FXX) Mr. Robot (USA) Empire (Fox) The Knick (Cinemax) The Leftovers (HBO) Penny Dreadful (Showtime) Rectify (Sundance) UnREAL (Lifetime)
Best Movie Made for Television or Limited Series Best Animation Series
Fargo (FX) Childhood's End (Syfy) Luther (BBC America) Saints & Strangers (Nat Geo) Show Me a Hero (HBO) The Wiz Live! (NBC) BoJack Horseman (Netflix) Bob's Burgers (Fox) The Simpsons (Fox) South Park (Comedy Central) Star Wars Rebels (Disney XD)
Most Bingeworthy Show Most Exciting New Series (All Honored)[5]
Outlander (Starz) Empire (Fox) Friends (NBC) Game of Thrones (HBO) Orange Is the New Black (Netflix) The Walking Dead (AMC) Atlanta (FX) Better Things (FX) Designated Survivor (ABC) The Good Place (NBC) One Mississippi (Amazon) Pitch (Fox) This Is Us (NBC) Westworld (HBO)
Best Acting in a Comedy Series
Best Actor Best Actress
Jeffrey Tambor as Maura PfeffermanTransparent Anthony Anderson as Andre "Dre" Johnson, Sr. – Black-ish Aziz Ansari as Dev Shah – Master of None Will Forte as Phil Miller – The Last Man on Earth Randall Park as Louis Huang – Fresh Off the Boat Fred Savage as Stewart Sanderson – The Grinder Rachel Bloom as Rebecca Bunch – Crazy Ex-Girlfriend Aya Cash as Gretchen Cutler – You're the Worst Wendi McLendon-Covey as Beverly Goldberg – The Goldbergs Gina Rodriguez as Jane Villanueva – Jane the Virgin Tracee Ellis Ross as Dr. Rainbow "Bow" Johnson – Black-ish Constance Wu as Jessica Huang – Fresh Off the Boat
Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress
Andre Braugher as Captain Raymond Holt – Brooklyn Nine-Nine Jaime Camil as Rogelio de la Vega – Jane the Virgin Jay Duplass as Joshua Pfefferman – Transparent Neil Flynn as Mike Heck – The Middle Keegan-Michael Key as Mark Rodriguez – Playing House Mel Rodriguez as Patsy De La Serda – Getting On Mayim Bialik as Dr. Amy Farrah FowlerThe Big Bang Theory Kether Donohue as Linsay Jillian – You're the Worst Allison Janney as Bonnie Plunkett – Mom Judith Light as Shelly Pfefferman – Transparent Niecy Nash as Denise Ortley – Getting On Eden Sher as Sue Heck – The Middle
Best Acting in a Drama Series
Best Actor Best Actress
Rami Malek as Elliot Alderson – Mr. Robot Hugh Dancy as Will GrahamHannibal Clive Owen as Dr. John W. Thackery – The Knick Liev Schreiber as Ray Donovan – Ray Donovan Justin Theroux as Kevin Garvey Jr. – The Leftovers Aden Young as Daniel Holden – Rectify Carrie Coon as Nora Durst – The Leftovers Shiri Appleby as Rachel Goldberg – UnREAL Viola Davis as Professor Annalise Keating, Esq. – How to Get Away with Murder Eva Green as Vanessa IvesPenny Dreadful Taraji P. Henson as Cookie LyonEmpire Krysten Ritter as Jessica JonesJessica Jones
Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress
Christian Slater as Mr. Robot – Mr. Robot Clayne Crawford as Ted Talbot Jr. – Rectify Christopher Eccleston as Matt Jamison – The Leftovers André Holland as Dr. Algernon Edwards – The Knick Jonathan Jackson as Avery Barkley – Nashville Rufus Sewell as John Smith – The Man in the High Castle Constance Zimmer as Quinn King – UnREAL Ann Dowd as Patti Levin – The Leftovers Regina King as Erika Murphy – The Leftovers Helen McCrory as Evelyn Poole – Penny Dreadful Hayden Panettiere as Juliette BarnesNashville Maura Tierney as Helen Solloway – The Affair
Best Acting in a Movie Made for Television or Limited Series
Best Actor Best Actress
Idris Elba as DCI John Luther – Luther Wes Bentley as Det. John Lowe – American Horror Story: Hotel Martin Clunes as Arthur Conan DoyleArthur & George Oscar Isaac as Nick WasicskoShow Me a Hero Vincent Kartheiser as William BradfordSaints & Strangers Patrick Wilson as State Trooper Lou SolversonFargo Kirsten Dunst as Peggy BlumquistFargo Kathy Bates as Iris – American Horror Story: Hotel Sarah Hay as Claire Robbins – Flesh and Bone Alyvia Alyn Lind as Dolly PartonDolly Parton's Coat of Many Colors Rachel McAdams as Detective Sergeant Antigone "Ani" Bezzerides – True Detective Shanice Williams as Dorothy GaleThe Wiz Live!
Best Supporting Actor Best Supporting Actress
Jesse Plemons as Ed BlumquistFargo David Alan Grier as The Cowardly Lion / Farmhand #2 – The Wiz Live! Ne-Yo as Tin-Man / Farmhand #1 – The Wiz Live! Nick Offerman as Karl Weathers – Fargo Raoul Trujillo as MassasoitSaints & Strangers Bokeem Woodbine as Mike Milligan – Fargo Jean Smart as Floyd GerhardtFargo Mary J. Blige as Wicked Witch of the WestThe Wiz Live! Laura Haddock as Megan Cantor – Luther Cristin Milioti as Betsy Solverson – Fargo Sarah Paulson as Sally McKenna and Billie Dean Howard – American Horror Story: Hotel Winona Ryder as Vinni Restiano – Show Me a Hero
Best Guest Performing
Best Guest Actor/Actress in a Comedy Series Best Guest Actor/Actress in a Drama Series
Timothy Olyphant as Himself – The Grinder Ellen Burstyn as Shirley Stabler – Mom Anjelica Huston as Vicki – Transparent Cherry Jones as Leslie Mackinaw – Transparent Jenifer Lewis as Ruby Johnson – Black-ish John Slattery as Claude Dumet – Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp Margo Martindale as Ruth Eastman – The Good Wife Richard Armitage as Francis DolarhydeHannibal Justin Kirk as Joseph Bucher – MANH(A)TTAN Patti LuPone as Joan Clayton – Penny Dreadful Marisa Tomei as Mimi Whiteman – Empire BD Wong as Whiterose – Mr. Robot
Reality & Variety
Best Structured Reality Show Best Unstructured Reality Show
Shark Tank (ABC) Antiques Roadshow (PBS) Inside the Actors Studio (Bravo) MythBusters (Discovery) Project Greenlight (HBO) Undercover Boss (CBS) Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown (CNN) Cops (Spike) Deadliest Catch (Discovery) Intervention (A&E) Naked and Afraid (Discovery) Pawn Stars (History)
Best Reality Show – Competition Best Reality Show Host
The Voice (NBC) The Amazing Race (CBS) Chopped (Food Network) Face Off (Syfy) MasterChef Junior (Fox) Survivor (CBS) James LiptonInside the Actors Studio Ted AllenChopped Phil KeoghanThe Amazing Race Jane LynchHollywood Game Night Jeff ProbstSurvivor Gordon RamsayHell's Kitchen
Best Talk Show
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO) The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (Comedy Central) The Graham Norton Show (BBC America) Jimmy Kimmel Live! (ABC) The Late Late Show with James Corden (CBS) The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon (NBC)

Louis XIII Genius Award

[edit]

Industrial Light & Magic[6]

Critics' Choice MVP Award

[edit]

Amy Schumer[7]

Star Wars: The Force Awakens addition

[edit]

The film Star Wars: The Force Awakens screened too late for the vast majority of the Broadcast Film Critics Association to see it in time for consideration for the awards. But after what an email to members called "an unprecedented cry out" from its membership, the BFCA's board of directors called a "special referendum" on adding the movie to the ten candidates for Best Picture, which it won. (A similar situation happened for the 6th Critics' Choice Awards in 2001, in which the film Cast Away was voted by referendum to be included among the nominees for Best Picture.) The BFCA faced immediate criticism, including from its own members, over what many saw as an attempt to increase ratings for the awards ceremony's broadcast on A&E (which, is 50% owned by Disney, the company behind Star Wars) on January 17, 2016.[8] Two members—Eric Melin (editor-in-chief of Scene-Stealers.com, a film critic of Lawrence Journal-World, and the president of the Kansas City Film Critics Circle) and Scott Renshaw (editor of Salt Lake City Weekly)—resigned in protest.

Melin, in an open letter, wrote:

"In order for a professional critics body to have integrity, nomination and voting guidelines must be consistent with the way they were laid out at the beginning of the process. Nominating Star Wars: The Force Awakens for Best Picture does not follow those guidelines, and re-ignites a loophole for this kind of thing to happen every year... Unlike the other nominations, this was not decided upon using a weighted ballot of all possibilities, and it smells like a desperate ploy to get better TV ratings. Additionally, your insistence on billing the Critic's Choice Awards as the 'most accurate predictor of the Academy Awards' is antithetical to the purpose of having a 'critic's choice' award at all. The awards should not serve as another TV marketing arm to the studios. Rather, it should represent the views and opinions of film critics, which is a very different group from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. As film criticism continues to be devalued and the lines between journalist, critic, and studio shill continue to be blurred, the only thing we have is our integrity, and this smacks of a marketing ploy. Believe me, I know because my day job is a social media marketer. What I am not is an employee of A&E Networks, and the only thing I have as a lowly paid film critic is the courage of my convictions."

— Eric Melin, [9]

Similarly, in another open letter, Renshaw wrote:

"This decision has been a long time coming, but was made inevitable by the decision to change the voting process to allow Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens to be included as a nominee after the official nominating deadline. Irrespective of any precedent that may be invoked... it is obvious to me that this decision is based more on its marketing value than making sure that the best films are included. If that were the case, the entire nomination process would have been opened up again to allow The Force Awakens to be considered in all categories. Any suggestion that this decision was made primarily for any reason other than to improve ratings for the awards broadcast feels disingenuous at best. An awards voting body has nothing to stand on but its integrity. I no longer feel my own personal integrity is consistent with ongoing membership in this organization."

— Scott Renshaw, [10][11]

Films with multiple nominations and wins

[edit]

The following twenty-six films received multiple nominations:

Film Nominations
Mad Max: Fury Road 13
Carol 9
The Martian
The Revenant
Spotlight 8
The Big Short 7
The Hateful Eight 6
Bridge of Spies 5
Brooklyn
The Danish Girl
Jurassic World
Sicario
Room 4
Ex Machina 3
Inside Out
Joy
Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation
Spy
Steve Jobs
Trainwreck
Trumbo
Black Mass 2
Furious 7
Love & Mercy
Sisters
Spectre

The following five films received multiple awards:

Film Awards
Mad Max: Fury Road 9
The Big Short 3
Spotlight
The Revenant 2
Room

Television programs with multiple nominations and wins

[edit]

The following programs received multiple nominations:

Program Network Category Nominations
Fargo FX Limited 8
The Leftovers HBO Drama 6
Transparent Amazon Comedy
The Wiz Live! NBC Movie 5
Black-ish ABC Comedy 4
Empire Fox Drama
Mr. Robot USA
Penny Dreadful Showtime
American Horror Story: Hotel FX Limited 3
Jane the Virgin The CW Comedy
The Knick Cinemax Drama
Luther BBC America Limited
Rectify Sundance Drama
Saints & Strangers Nat Geo Limited
Show Me a Hero HBO
UnREAL Lifetime Drama
You're the Worst FXX Comedy
The Amazing Race CBS Reality – Competition 2
Chopped Food Network
Fresh Off the Boat ABC Comedy
Getting On HBO
The Grinder Fox
Hannibal NBC Drama
Inside the Actors Studio Bravo Reality – Structured
The Last Man on Earth Fox Comedy
Master of None Netflix
The Middle ABC
Mom CBS
Nashville ABC Drama
Survivor CBS Reality – Competition

The following programs received multiple awards:

Program Network Category Awards
Fargo FX Limited 4
Mr. Robot USA Drama 3
  1. ^ Hipes, Patrick (January 17, 2016). "Critics' Choice Awards: 'Spotlight' Wins Best Picture; 'Mr. Robot' Best Drama Series". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  2. ^ Evans, Greg (December 11, 2015). "'Silicon Valley' Star T.J. Miller to Host Critics' Choice Awards". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved December 11, 2015.
  3. ^ Hipes, Patrick (December 14, 2015). "Critics' Choice Awards Nominations: 'Mad Max' Leads Film; ABC, HBO, FX Networks, & 'Fargo' Top TV". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved December 14, 2015.
  4. ^ Galuppo, Mia (September 30, 2015). "Critics' Choice TV and Movie Awards to Combine Into One Event". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 30, 2015.
  5. ^ Prudom, Laura (September 7, 2016). "Critics' Choice Awards Reveal Most Exciting New Series Honorees". Variety. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
  6. ^ Anderton, Ethan (January 18, 2016). "VOTD: BB-8 Helps Industrial Light & Magic Accept Genius Award at Critics' Choice Awards". /Film. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
  7. ^ Parker, Ryan (January 17, 2016). "Critics' Choice Awards: Amy Schumer Named MVP, Thanks Managers She Fired". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved January 17, 2016.
  8. ^ Adams, Sam (December 22, 2015). "Broadcast Film Critics Association Faces Criticism for Adding 'The Force Awakens' to Best Picture Ballot". IndieWire. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  9. ^ Melin, Eric (December 22, 2015). "Why I Resigned from the BFCA over "Star Wars: The Force Awakens"". Scene-Stealers. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  10. ^ Scott Renshaw [@scottrenshaw] (December 22, 2015). "Sent. Buh-bye, BFCA" (Tweet). Retrieved December 22, 2015 – via Twitter.
  11. ^ Romano, Nick (December 23, 2015). "'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Critics' Choice Awards Nomination Sparks Outcry". Collider. Retrieved December 23, 2015.