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Newer Post Older PostSUNDAY, MARCH 29, 2015
The IRA Film Awards 40th Anniversary -- Best Of
2014
2014 IRA FILM AWARD WINNERS
The IRAs are a mysterious but august film society that has voted on the
best films of the year since 1976. Officially known as the New York
Independent Film Critics Awards but lovingly nicknamed the IRAs, it is
more international and indie focused than the Oscars, more mercurial
than the LA Film Critics, more loyal to their favorites than the Golden
Globes, the IRAs are proud to announce their picks for the best movies
released in 2014. It's their 40th anniversary!
The IRAs began when passionate film students and friends complained
about the parade of annual awards shows, declaring, "We could do
better!" What followed was an all-night, knock-down, drag-out fight to
establish the very first winners of the IRAs. (One of the members is
named Ira, but how his name became the name of the award is a story
lost in the mist of time.) The IRAs has been profiled in The New Yorker
so it is officially a New York institution, though no one has ever heard
of it. Over the years, its rotating cast of voting members have included
Oscar-winning writers, major directors, top studio execs, best-selling
and critically acclaimed authors of books on movies, critics, budding
playwrights, plain old film buffs and so on. They have no more claim to
pronounce the best films of the year than anyone else but they've been
doing it for decades so, hey, it's tradition! And the IRA goes to....
BEST PICTURE
1. Nightcrawler -- 29 pts. (out of a possible 45 pts.)
2. Foxcatcher -- 21 pts.
3. Stranger By The Lake -- 17 pts.
4. (tie) Boyhood 16 pts.
Ida 16 pts.
NOTE: When there's a tie, the number of films tied fill up a
corresponding number of slots. Here, two films tied for #4, so that fills
up both #4 and #5. If three films were tied for #2, then there would be
just one more winner to fill up the #5 slot, and so on. This year nine
ballots were submitted with a top score for each film of 5 pts, so the
maximum any one film could achieve was 45 pts.
BEST DIRECTOR
1. Dan Gilroy for Nightcrawler -- 27 pts.
2. Bennett Miller for Foxcatcher -- 22 pts.
3. Pawel Pawlikoska for Ida -- 16 pts.
4. (tie) Alain Guiraudie for Stranger By The Lake -- 15 pts.
            Richard Linklater for Boyhood -- 15 pts.
NOTE: Clearly, the IRA voters are steeped in auteurism, or at least
auteurism is so firmly entrenched it influences thinking whether one
admits it or not. The five Best Picture winners are exactly matched by
the five Best Director nominees and winner, right down to healthy
leads for Nightcrawler  and Foxcatcher, with a razor thin margin
between the bottom three films. In this case, however, it is Ida ahead
by one point while  Boyhood and Stranger By The Lake are tied for
fourth.
BEST ACTOR
Jake Gyllenhall for Nightcrawler by acclamation
1. Jake Gyllenhaal for Nightcrawler -- 35 pts.
2. Tom Hardy for The Drop and Locke -- 19 pts.
3. Oscar Isaac for A Most Violent Year and The Two Faces of January -
- 16 pts.
4. Joaquin Phoenix for The Immigrant and  Inherent Vice -- 10 pts.
5. Channing Tatum for Foxcatcher -- 9 pts.
NOTE: If a majority of the voters present at the IRAs (some members
vote in absentia via ballot) all nominate the same person or film in a
category, that nominee is the winner by acclamation. They garnered a
majority of support on the first ballot. We then go through our ballots
to see the other honorees, but the winner is foreordained. As with every
category, once a winner is announced, there is a vote on whether to
rescind. (Perhaps a core group loved one performance (enough to score
the most points) but a majority hated it. Or perhaps a majority want to
see the runner-up win instead. In cases of a first round winner by
acclamation, since a majority of the people already picked it, a vote to
rescind has never prevailed.
BEST ACTRESS
1. Essie Davis for The Babadook -- 24 pts.
2. Emmanuelle Seigner for  Venus In Fur -- 21 pts.
3. Marion Cotillard for  The Immigrant and  Two Days, One Night -- 18
pts.
4. (tie) Amy Adams for  Big Eyes -- 11 pts.
            Lisa Loven Kingsli for  Force Majeure -- 11 pts.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
1. Ethan Hawke for Boyhood -- 23 pts.
2. Riz Ahmed for  Nightcrawler -- 15 pts.
3. (tie) Patrick d'Assumçao for  Stranger By The Lake -- 12 pts.
            Jeremy Renner for  The Immigrant --12 pts.
5. Mark Ruffalo for  Foxcatcher -- 9 pts.
                                            
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
1. Agata Kulesza for Ida -- 27 pts.
2. Renee Russo for  Nightcrawler -- 21 pts.
3. Tilda Swinton for  The Grand Budapest Hotel and  Snowpiercer -- 16
pts.
4. Marion Bailey for  Mr. Turner -- 13 pts.
5. Bharati Achrekar for  The Lunchbox -- 9 pts.
NOTE: Oh the travails of voting on movies. It's hard enough to
convince people to see the films you loved. It's even harder to agree on
categories: is this performance a lead or a supporting turn? Are there
two leads in this film? Are there no leads in that film? Kulesza played
the aunt in Ida, a very strong character. Clearly the postulant (the
young woman, Ida, raised in a convent who has yet to take her vows) is
the lead role. She's in virtually every scene and appears from beginning
to end. The aunt is the only other conceivable character who could be
considered a leading role. (The only other character of any note is the
very handsome saxophone player (Dawid Ogrodnik) but he's
unquestionably a supporting role.) One could argue -- as some did --
that the aunt is the other main character. However, most felt it was
supporting and there was just one lead character. Marion Bailey played
the innkeeper that Mr. Turner met during the film. Bharati Achrekar
played "Auntie," the upstairs neighbor of our heroine, whose voice was
heard throughout as the two women chatted and Auntie shared advice.
However, she was never seen, so this was a vote for an actress who
never appeared on screen. Usually, voice work is rewarded for an
animated film where at least the character appears, even if the actor
themself does not. On the other hand, there was strong support for
Renee Russo's career-best work in Nightcrawler. But  Ida, the only film
among the major winners that was primarily about women, devoted
more screen time and more substance to its women than any of the
other nominees and thus won here. (Also, the voters might have sensed
this was their best shot at giving an award to a film that would rank
among the Top Five favorites in Best Picture,  Best Director and Best
Cinematography yet win none of them.)
BEST SCREENPLAY
1. Dan Gilroy for Nightcrawler -- 37 pts.
2. Ritesh Batre for  The Lunchbox -- 17 pts.
3. E. Max Frye and Dan Futterman for  Foxcatcher -- 16 pts.
4. Alain Guiraudie for  Stranger By The Lake --12 pts.
5. Richard Linklater for  Boyhood -- 10 pts.
NOTE: Voting begins with Costumes, works its way up to Best Picture
and then ends with playful "negative" awards for our least favorite
movies and performances of the year (especially those that were over-
praised). So as we worked out way up the categories, this is where it
was clear the night would belong to Nightcrawler. Its screenplay was
the runaway favorite. Notably, the second most powerful film --
Foxcatcher -- fell to third here, with the charming screenplay for The
Lunchbox taking second place. ( The Lunchbox is an epistolary film,
about two people who exchange letters placed in a lunchbox passed
back and forth throughout the movie.) Since it's dominated by the
written word, Screenplay was the best shot at a triumph for this film.
Nonetheless, with Foxcatcher and the rest blown away by Dan Gilroy
here , it was quickly clear that Nightcrawler was a comer.
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
1. Robert Elswit for Inherent Vice and Nightcrawler -- 31 pts.
2. Ryszard Lenczewski and Lukasz Zal for  Ida -- 26 pts.
3. Dick Pope for  Cuban Fury and Mr. Turner -- 20 pts.
4. Greig Fraser for  The Gambler and  Foxcatcher -- 20 pts.
5. Emmanuel Lubezki for  Birdman: Or (The Unexpected Virtue Of
Ignorance) -- 7 pts.
NOTE: Like many awards groups, the IRAs considers a person's entire
body of work during the calendar year. (A movie must be commercially
released in New York City for one week in order to qualify for the
IRAs.) If a majority agrees, one or more movies may be ignored when
announcing the nominee or winner (perhaps they loved one of their
movies and hated two others, or simply hadn't seen them). Naturally, if
a person has two really well done films in a year, that can help their
chances, hence Robert Elswit's triumph for shooting both the big
winner of the evening  Nightcrawler as well as Inherent Vice. Realizing
Fraser shot both favorite Foxcatcher and The Gambler, a movie much
touted by some as worth checking out, was a pleasant surprise for
others. Discovering that Pope had shot the classy, critically acclaimed
period piece Mr. Turner  as well as a forgettable comedy about salsa
called Cuban Fury merely amused. This award is strictly for Mr.
Turner but it's instructive to see how a great talent like Pope can also
work on dreck; hey, you gotta pay the bills. This was followed by a
discussion of which if any tech workers like production designers,
costumers and the notoriously prolific film composers may be more
discerning when it comes to what movies to work on. If a film released
in 2014 is not mentioned under an artist's nomination or win, it has
been ignored by consensus. As for Birdman, Michael was schooled on
the difference between cinematography and the general choices of the
director and the film. While some (Michael and others) felt the faux
tracking shot used throughout the entire film was in fact a distracting
and pointless stunt in a bad film, others contended that whatever one
felt about the movie, as a technical challenge lighting and shooting the
many long tracking shots that were strung together was an impressive
achievement for Lubezki. Of course, everyone hated the moment where
we saw a drummer in a hallway playing the film's score at that moment
and we name-checked the many times this conceit had been used
before and better, such as Top Secret!
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
1. Suzie Davies for Mr. Turner -- 23 pts.
2. Jess Gonchor for  Foxcatcher -- 19 pts.
3. Rick Heinrichs for  Big Eyes -- 16 pts.
4. Kevin Kavanaugh for  Nightcrawler -- 13 pts.
5. Josefin Åsberg for  Force Majeure -- 12 pts.
BEST SCORE
1. Mica Levi for Under The Skin -- 21 pts.
2. James Newton Howard for Nightcrawler -- 19 pts.
3. Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross for  Gone Girl -- 14 pts.
5. Danny Elfman for  Big Eyes-- 10 pts.
5. Alexandre Desplat for  The Grand Budapest Hotel --9 pts.
NOTE: Like I said, composers are the trollops of the film world: they
never say no. They'll quite often create scores for two or three or four
movies released in one year. Film scores are hugely important, yet
they're often the last element added to a movie, in a rush, at the last
minute. Go figure. (No one ever said Hollywood was smart.) Alexandre
Desplat also did the score for The Imitation Game which had exactly
one vociferous supporter among the IRAs. It proved the most hated
film of the year among IRA voters and thus his work is not
acknowledged here. James Newton Howard also did the score for
Maleficent, a big Hollywood film that the few members who saw
enjoyed.
BEST EDITING
1. (tie) Jay Cassidy, Stuart Levy and Conor O'Neill
for Foxcatcher -- 12 pts.
Simon Njoo for The Babadook -- 12 pts.
3. Jean Christophe Hym for  Stranger By The Lake -- 11 pts.
4. Sandra Adair for Boyhood -- 9 pts.
5. Justine Wright for  Locke -- 7 pts.
BEST COSTUME
1. (tie) Jacqueline Durran for Mr. Turner -- 23 pts.
Kasia Walicka-Maimone for Foxcatcher and A Most
Violent Year -- 23 pts.
3. Milena Cononero for The Grand Budapest Hotel -- 13 pts.
4. (tie) Colleen Atwood for Big Eyes and Into The Woods -- 10 pts.
            Maja Meschede and Anna B. Sheppard for  Fury -- 10 pts.
SOMINEX (The movie that put you to sleep)
1. The Monuments Men -- 21 pts.
2. Into The Woods -- 13 pts.
3. Jersey Boys -- 7 pts.
4.  (tie) Birdman: Or (The Unexpected Virtue Of Ignorance) 5 pts.
The Congress -- 5 pts.
Exhibition -- 5 pts.
Only Lovers Left Alive -- 5 pts.
DRAMAMINE (The film that made you sick)
1. The Imitation Game  -- 23  pts.
2. Whiplash --  12 pts.
3. Nymphomaniac --  10 pts.
4. The Lego Movie  -- 9 pts.
5. Into The W oods -- 8 pts.
NOTE: The Imitation Game had one ardent supporter at the
IRAs (along with an Oscar) to console itself. However , it was
widely derided for the film's framing device, in which Alan
Turing told his story . Turing was a gay man persecuted by the
police despite playing a crucial role in breaking the Nazi code
machine Enigma and thus helping win the war .  In real life,
Turing never used his war -time heroics to defend himself,
despite horrendous treatment. It was considered a state secret
and Turing kept his pledge to maintain silence. Essentially , he
remained loyal to the country that betrayed him. It's a key
reason his life has inspired numerous biographies and an
acclaimed play . The movie had Turing do the one thing he
resolutely refused to do.  Thus to many of the IRA voters not
only did the film choose a dramatically dull device ("Let me tell
you my story") but in doing so it undermined the bravest act of
his life, cheapening the very sacrifice Turing made. Some say
pish to historical fact; the movie is the movie and you should
judge it on its own terms since very , very few are historically
accurate. Get your facts from history books not Hollywood,
they say . Debate among yourselves.
MECHANICAL ACTRESS
1. Lilla Crawford for  Into The Woods -- 25 pts.
2. Sofía Vergara for Chef --  18 pts.
3. Meryl Streep for  Into The W oods  -- 14 pts.
4. Kate Winslet for Labor Day --  6 pts.
5. (tie) Keira Knightley for   Begin Again and The Imitation
Game  --    9 pts.
            Elizabeth Olsen for  Godzilla and  Very Good Girls  -- 9
pts.
                Rosamund Pike for Gone Girl  -- 9 pts.
                 Robin Wright for The Congress -- 9 pts.
MECHANICAL ACTOR
1. The entir e cast of The Monuments Men -- 17 pts.
2. Noah Wiseman for  The Babadook  -- 16 pts.
3. Tom Wilkinson for Selma --  16 pts.
4. Benedict Cumberbatch for The Imitation Game  --11 pts.
5. (tie) Johnny Depp for  Into The W oods  -- 7 pts.
            J. K. Simmons for Whiplash -- 7 pts.
PAST IRA WINNERS
THE COMPLETE IRA MOVIE AWARD WINNERS
1975  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Barry Lyndon
Best Director: Claude Chabrol for  La Rupture  and  Just Before
Nightfall
Best Actor: Jack Nicholson in  One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest
Best Actress: Ellen Burstyn in  Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
Best Supporting Actor: François Perrier in  Just Before Nightfall
Best Supporting Actress: Blythe Danner in  Hearts Of The West
Best Screenplay: Tom Stoppard and Thomas Wiseman for  The
Romantic Englishwoman
Best Cinematography: John Alcott for  Barry Lyndon
1976 IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture: (tie)  Lipstick  and  The Marquise Of O
Best Director: Eric Rohmer for  The Marquise Of O
Best Actor: Sean Connery in  Robin And Marian
Best Actress: Sissy Spacek in  Carrie
Best Supporting Actor: Jason Robards in  All The President’s Men
Best Supporting Actress: Anne Bancroft in  Lipstick
Best Screenplay: Alain Tanner and John Berger for  Jonah Who Will Be
25 In The Year 2000
Best Cinematography: Nestor Almendros for  The Marquise Of O
1977  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Annie Hall
Best Director: Wim Wenders for  The American Friend
Best Actor: John Gielgud in  Providence
Best Actress: Dianne Keaton in  Annie Hall  and  Looking For Mr.
Goodbar
Best Supporting Actor: G. D. Spradlin in  One On One
Best Supporting Actress: Vanessa Redgrave in  Julia
Best Screenplay: Woody Allen and Marshall Brickman for  Annie Hall
Best Cinematography: Robby Müller for  The American Friend
1978  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Days Of Heaven
Best Director: Terence Malick for  Days Of Heaven
Best Actor: Jon Voight in  Coming Home
Best Actress: Jane Fonda in  Coming Home
Best Supporting Actor: Dom DeLuise in  The End
Best Supporting Actress: Stephane Audran in  Violette
Best Screenplay: Eric Rohmer for  Perceval
Best Cinematography: Nestor Almendros for  Days Of Heaven
1979  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Fedora
Best Director: Blake Edwards for  10
Best Actor: Clint Eastwood in  Escape From Alcatraz
Best Actress: Hanna Schygulla in  The Marriage Of Maria Braun
Best Supporting Actor: Denholm Elliott in  Cuba  and  Saint Jack
Best Supporting Actress: Frances Sternhagen in  Fedora  and  Starting
Over
Best Screenplay: Billy Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond for  Fedora
Best Cinematography: Tak Fujimoto for  Last Embrace  and  Remember
My Name
Best Music: Miklos Rozsa for  Fedora  and  Last Embrace
Best Production Design: Dean Edward Mitzner for  1941
1980  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  The Big Red One
Best Director: Sam Fuller for  The Big Red One
Best Actor: Lee Marvin for  The Big Red One
Best Actress: Jodie Foster for  Carny  and  Foxes
Best Supporting Actor: (tie) Joe Pesci in  Raging Bull  and Harry Dean
Stanton in  The Black Marble, The Long Riders, Private
Benjamin  and  Wise Blood
Best Supporting Actress: Pamela Reed in  The Long Riders  and  Melvin
And Howard
Best Screenplay: Sam Fuller for  The Big Red One
Best Cinematography: Jordan Cronenweth for  Altered States
Best Music: Dana Kaproff for  The Big Red One
Best Production Design: Tambi Larsen for  Heaven’s Gate
1981  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Cutter’s Way
Best Director: Ivan Passer for  Cutter’s Way
Best Actor: Jeff Bridges in  Cutter’s Way
Best Actress: Faye Dunaway in  Mommie Dearest
Best Supporting Actor: Jack Nicholson in  Reds
Best Supporting Actress: Mona Washbouurne in  Stevie
Best Screenplay: John Guare for  Atlantic City
Best Cinematography: Jordan Cronenweth for  Cutter’s Way
Best Music: Georges DeLerue for  The Last Metro, Rich and Famous,
True Confessions  and  The Woman Next Door
Best Production Design: Ken Adam for  Pennies From Heaven
Best Costume Design: Shirley Russell for  Reds
1982  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Victor/Victoria
Best Director: Blake Edwards for  Victor/Victoria
Best Actor: Jack Lemmon in  Missing
Best Actress: (tie) Julie Andrews in  Victor/Victoria  and Jessica Lange
in Frances
Best Supporting Actor: Robert Preston in  Victor/Victoria
Best Supporting Actress: Lesley Ann Warren in  Victor/Victoria
Best Screenplay: Blake Edwards for  Victor/Victoria
Best Cinematography: Xaver Schwartzenberger for  Lola  and  Veronika
Voss
Best Music: Henry Mancini and Leslie Bricusse for  Victor/Victoria
Best Production Design: Rodger Maus for  Victor/Victoria
Best Costume Design: Patricia Norris for  Victor/Victoria
1983  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Berlin Alexanderplatz
Best Director: Andrzej Wajda for  Danton
Best Actor: Eric Roberts for  Star ’80
Best Actress: Shirley MacLaine for  Terms Of Endearment
Best Supporting Actor: Jerry Lewis for  The King Of Comedy
Best Supporting Actress: Jamie Lee Curtis for  Trading Places
Best Screenplay: Bill Forsyth for  Local Hero
Best Cinematography: Sven Nykvist for  Star ’80
Best Music: Peer Raben for  Berlin Alexanderplatz
Best Production Design: Fernando Scarfiotti for  Scarface
Best Costume Design: Yvonne Sassinot DeNestle for  Danton
1984  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture: (tie)  L’Argent  and  Once Upon A Time In America
Best Director: Sergio Leone for  Once Upon A Time In America
Best Actor: Clint Eastwood in  Tightrope
Best Actress: Helen Mirren in  Cal
Best Supporting Actor: Jean-Luc Godard in  First Name: Carmen
Best Supporting Actress: Christine Lahti in  Swing Shift
Best Screenplay: Franco Arcalli, Leonardo Benvenuti, Piero De
Bernardi, Franco Ferrini, Sergio Leone, Enrico Medioli for  Once Upon
A Time In America
Best Cinematography: Robby Müller for  Paris Texas  and  Repo Man
Best Music: Ennio Morricone for  Once Upon A Time In America
Best Production Design: James Singelis for  Once Upon A Time In
America
Best Costume Design: Mic Cheminal for  Entre Nous
1985  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Prizzi’s Honor
Best Director: Martin Scorsese for  After Hours
Best Actor: Jack Nicholson in  Prizzi’s Honor
Best Actress: Mia Farrow in  The Purple Rose Of Cairo
Best Supporting Actor: William Hickey in  Prizzi’s Honor
Best Supporting Actress: Anjelica Huston in  Prizzi’s Honor
Best Screenplay: Joseph Minion for  After Hours
Best Cinematography: Andrzej Bartkowiak for  Prizzi’s Honor
Best Music: Brian Gascoigne and Junior Hamrich for  The Emerald
Forest
Best Production Design: Jeffrey Townsend for  After Hours
Best Costume Design: Ann Roth for  The Jagged Edge  and  Sweet
Dreams
1986  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Eyes On The Prize
Best Director: David Lynch for  Blue Velvet
Best Actor: (tie) Daniel Day-Lewis in  My Beautiful Laundrette  and Jeff
Goldblum in  The Fly
Best Actress: Laura Dern in  Smooth Talk
Best Supporting Actor: Steve Buscemi in  Parting Glances
Best Supporting Actress: Mary Stuart Masterson in  At Close Range
Best Screenplay: Hanif Kureishi for  My Beautiful Laundrette
Best Cinematography: Frederick Elmes for  Blue Velvet
Best Music: (tie) George Delerue for  Platoon  and Herbie Hancock
for Round Midnight
Best Production Design: Patricia Norris for  Blue Velvet
Best Costume Design: Jenny Beaven and John Bright for  A Room With
A View
1987  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Housekeeping
Best Director: Bill Forsyth for  Housekeeping
Best Actor: Gary Oldman in  Prick Up Your Ears
Best Actress: Christine Lahti in  Housekeeping
Best Supporting Actor: John Mahoney in  Moonstruck  and  Tin Men
Best Supporting Actress: Vanessa Redgrave in  Prick Up Your Ears
Best Screenplay: Bill Forsyth for  Housekeeping
Best Cinematography: Phillippe Rousselot for  Hope And Glory
Best Music: David Byrne, Ryuichi Sakamoto and Cong Su for  The Last
Emperor
Best Production Design: Santo Loquasto for  Radio Days
Best Costume Design: Mary-Jane Reyner for  Housekeeping
1988  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Dead Ringers
Best Director: David Cronenberg for  Dead Ringers
Best Actor: Jeremy Irons in  Dead Ringers
Best Actress: Jodie Foster in  The Accused
Best Supporting Actor: Divine in  Hairspray
Best Supporting Actress: Claudia Karvan in  High Tide
Best Screenplay: Christopher Hampton for  Dangerous Liaisons
Best Cinematography: Vittorio Storaro for  Tucker: The Man And His
Dream
Best Music: George Fenton for  Dangerous Liaisons
Best Production Design: Dean Tavoularis for  Tucker: The Man And His
Dream
Best Costume Design: Van Smith for  Hairspray
1989  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Story Of Women
Best Director: Claude Chabrol for  Story
Of Women
Best Actor: John Hurt in  Scandal
Best Actress: Isabelle Huppert in  Story Of Women
Best Supporting Actor: Ethan Hawke in  Dad  and  Dead Poets Society
Best Supporting Actress: Anjelica Huston in  Enemies: A Love Story
Best Screenplay: Blake Edwards for  Skin Deep
Best Cinematography: Jeff Preiss for  Let’s Get Lost
Best Music: Michael Kamen for  The Adventures Of Baron Munchausen
Best Production Design: Dante Ferretti for  The Adventures Of Baron
Munchausen
Best Costume Design: Jane Robinson for  Scandal
1990  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  GoodFellas
Best Director: Martin Scorsese for  GoodFellas
Best Actor: Michel Blanc in  Monsieur Hire
Best Actress: Anjelica Huston in  The Grifters
Best Supporting Actor: Joe Pesci in  GoodFellas
Best Supporting Actress: Lorraine Bracco in  GoodFellas
Best Screenplay: Craig Lucas for  Longtime Companion
Best Cinematography: Oliver Stapleton for  The Grifters
Best Music: Elmer Bernstein for  The Grifters
Best Production Design: Dennis Gassner for  The Grifters
Best Costume Design: Richard Bruno for  The Grifters
1991  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  The Man In The Moon
Best Director: Robert Mulligan for  The Man In The Moon
Best Actor: River Phoenix in  Dogfight  and  My Own Private Idaho
Best Actress: Judy Davis in  Barton Fink, Impromptu,  and  Naked
Lunch
Best Supporting Actor: Harvey Keitel in  Bugsy, Mortal
Thoughts,  and  Thelma & Louise
Best Supporting Actress: Juliette Lewis in  Cape Fear
Best Screenplay: Michael Tolkin for  The Rapture
Best Cinematography: Freddie Francis for  Cape Fear  and  The Man In
The Moon
Best Music: Ennio Morricone for  Bugsy
Best Production Design: Dennis Gassner for  Barton Fink  and  Bugsy
Best Costume Design: Albert Wolsky for  Bugsy
1992  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Raise The Red Lantern
Best Director: Robert Altman for  The Player
Best Actor: Tim Robbins in  Bob Roberts  and  The Player
Best Actress: Emma Thompson in  Howards End
Best Supporting Actor: Jaye Davidson in  The Crying Game
Best Supporting Actress: Judy Davis in  Husbands And Wives
Best Screenplay: Michael Tolkin for  The Player
Best Cinematography: Zhao Fei and Lun Yang for  Raise The Red
Lantern
Best Music: Lenny Niehaus for  Unforgiven
Best Production Design: Marc Caro for  Delicatessen
Best Costume Design: Alexander Julien for  The Player
Sominex Award:  A Few Good Men
Dramamine Award:  Basic Instinct
Mechanical Actor: Michael Douglas in  Basic Instinct
Mechanical Actress: ****
1993  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Six Degrees Of Separation
Best Director: Nancy Savoca for  Household Saints
Best Actor: Dennis Quaid in  Flesh And Bone
Best Actress: Stockard Channing in  Six Degrees Of Separation
Best Supporting Actor: Leonardo DiCaprio in  A Boy’s Life  and  What’s
Eating Gilbert Grape?
Best Supporting Actress: Regina Tourney in  Like Water For Chocolate
Best Screenplay: Mike Leigh for  Naked
Best Cinematography: Michael Balhaus for  The Age Of Innocence
Best Music: Elmer Bernstein for  The Age Of Innocence  and  The
Cemetery Club
Best Production Design: Dante Ferretti for  The Age Of Innocence
Best Costume Design: Gabriella Pescucci for  The Age Of Innocence
Sominex Award:  Heaven And Earth
Dramamine Award:  Falling Down
Mechanical Actor: Richard Gere in  Sommersby
Mechanical Actress: Madonna in  Body Of Evidence
1994  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Red
Best Director: Krzyzstof Kieslowski for  Red and  White
Best Actor: Terence Stamp in  Priscilla, Queen of the Desert
Best Actress: Linda Fiorentino in  The Last Seduction
Best Supporting Actor: Christian Bale in  Little Women
Best Supporting Actress: Kristin Scott Thomas in  Four Weddings and
a Funeral
Best Screenplay: Steve Baranczek for  The Last Seduction
Best Cinematography: Stephen Czapsky for  Ed Wood
Best Music: Zbigniew Preissner for  Red and  White
Best Production Design: Dennis Gastner for  The Hudsucker Proxy
Best Costume Design: Lizzie Gardiner and Tim Chappel for  Priscilla,
Queen of The Desert
Sominex Award:  Wyatt Earp
1995  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Exotica
Best Director: Terry Zwigoff for  Crumb
Best Actor: John Travolta in  Get Shorty
Best Actress: (A three-way tie) Mia Kershner in  Exotica;  Alicia
Silverstone in  Clueless;  Nicole Kidman in  To Die For
Best Supporting Actor: Tim Roth in  Rob Roy
Best Supporting Actress: Mare Winningham in  Georgia
Best Screenplay: (tie) Atom Egoyan for  Exotica  and Buck Henry for  To
Die For
Best Cinematography: Newton Thomas Sigel for  The Usual Suspects
Best Music: John Ottman for  The Usual Suspects
Best Production Design: Dante Ferretti for  Casino
Best Costumes: Mona May for  Clueless
Sominex Award:  The Brothers McMullen
Dramamine Award:  Braveheart
Mechanical Actor: Dennis Miller in  The Net  and the cast of  The
Brothers McMullen
Mechanical Actress: Annette Bening in  The American President
1996  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  La Ceremonie
Best Director: Claude Chabrol for  La Ceremonie
Best Actor: Ewen McGregor in  Trainspotting
Best Actress: (tie) Kristin Scott Thomas in  The English Patient  and
Emily Watson in  Breaking The Waves
Best Supporting Actor: Ian Holm in  Big Night
Best Supporting Actress: Mary Kay Place in  Citizen Ruth  and  Manny &
Lo
Best Screenplay: John Sayles for  Lone Star
Best Cinematography: (tie) Darius Khondji for  Stealing Beauty  and
Oliver Stapleton for  Kansas City
Best Music: Tiffany Anders, Burt Bacharach, David Baerwald, Carole
Bayer Sager, Ed Berghoff, Elvis Costello, Gerry Goffin, Louise Goffin,
Tonio K, Larry Klein, J. Mascis, Joni Mitchell, Boyd Rice, David A.
Stewart, and J. Mayo Williams for  Grace Of My Heart
Best Production Design: Harley Jessup for  James And The Giant Peach
Best Costume Design: Dona Granata for  Kansas City
Sominex Award:  The English Patient
Dramamine Award:  A Time To Kill
Mechanical Actor: All the men in  She’s The One
Mechanical Actress: Maxine Bahns in  She’s The One
1997  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture: (tie)  Crash  and  Grosse Pointe Blank
Best Director: David Cronenberg for  Crash
Best Actor: John Cusack for  Grosse Pointe Blank
Best Actress: Julie Christie in  Afterglow
Best Supporting Actor: Kevin Spacey in  L. A. Confidential
Best Supporting Actress: Christina Ricci in  The Ice Storm
Best Screenplay: Neil LaBute for  In The Company Of Men
Best Cinematography: Roger Deakins for  Kundun
Best Music: (tie) Eleni Karaindrou for  Ulysses’ Gaze  and Michael
Nyman for  Gattaca
Best Production Design: (tie) Dan Weil for  The Fifth Element  and Jan
Roelfs for  Gattaca
Best Costume Design: Denise Cronenberg for  Crash
Sominex Award:  The Pillow Book
Dramamine Award:  Con Air
Mechanical Actor: Billy Zane in  Titanic
Mechanical Actress: Elisabeth Shue in  Deconstructing Harry  and  The
Saint
1998  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Gods And Monsters
Best Director: (tie) Bill Condon for  Gods And Monsters  and Todd
Solondz for  Happiness
Best Actor: Ian McKellen in  Gods And Monsters
Best Actress: Christina Ricci in  The Opposite Of Sex
Best Supporting Actor: Dylan Baker in  Happiness
Best Supporting Actress: Lisa Kudrow in  The Opposite Of Sex
Best Screenplay: Bill Condon for  Gods And Monsters
Best Cinematography: Maryse Alberti for  Happiness  and  Velvet
Goldmine
Best Music: Carter Burwell for  Gods And Monsters
Best Production Design: Thérèse DePrez for  Happiness
Best Costume Design: Bruce Finlayson for  Gods And Monsters
Sominex Award:  Dangerous Beauty
Dramamine Award:  Stepmom
Mechanical Actor: Bruce Willis in  Armageddon, The
Siege  and  Mercury Rising
Mechanical Actress: Jena Malone in  Stepmom
1999  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Fight Club
Best Director: (tie) David Fincher for  Fight Club  and Spike Jonze
for Being John Malkovich
Best Actor: Terence Stamp in  The Limey
Best Actress: (tie) Nicole Kidman in  Eyes Wide Shut  and Hillary Swank
in Boys Don’t Cry
Best Supporting Actor: Philip Seymour Hoffman in  Magnolia  and  The
Talented Mr. Ripley
Best Supporting Actress: Catherine Keener in  Being John Malkovich
Best Screenplay: Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor for  Election
Best Cinematography: Robert Richardson for  Bringing Out The
Dead  and  Snow Falling On Cedars
Best Music: Trey Parker and Marc Shaiman for  South Park: Bigger,
Longer & Uncut
Best Production Design: Owen Paterson for  The Matrix
Best Costume Design: Michael Kaplan for  Fight Club
Sominex Award:  The World Is Not Enough
Dramamine Award:  The Green Mile
Mechanical Actor: Kevin Spacey in  American Beauty
Mechanical Actress: Annette Bening in  American Beauty
2000  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  L’ Humanite
Best Director: (tie) Terence Davies for  The House Of Mirth  and Jim
Jarmusch for  Ghost Dog: Way Of The Samurai
Best Actor: Forrest Whitaker in  Ghost Dog: Way Of The Samurai
Best Actress: (tie) Severine Caneele in  L’ Humanite  and Michelle Yeoh
in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Best Supporting Actor: Jack Black in  High Fidelity  and  Jesus’s Son
Best Supporting Actress: Lupe Ontiveros in  Chuck And Buck
Best Screenplay: Kenneth Lonnergan for  You Can Count On Me
Best Cinematography: Remi Adefarasin for  The House Of Mirth
Best Music: RZA for  Ghost Dog: Way Of The Samurai
Best Production Design: Gideon Ponte for  American
Psycho  and  Hamlet
Best Costume Design: Monica Howe for  The House Of Mirth
Sominex Award:  Mission Impossible 2
Dramamine Award:  The Replacements  (aka The Scabs)
Mechanical Actor: Ian Holm in  Joe Gould’s Secret
Mechanical Actress: Charlize Theron in  Reindeer Games
2001  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  The Werckmeister Harmonies
Best Director: Bela Tarr for  The Werckmeister Harmonies
Best Actor: John Cameron Mitchell for  Hedwig And The Angry Inch
Best Actress: Naomi Watts in  Mulholland Drive
Best Supporting Actor: Steve Buscemi in  Ghost World
Best Supporting Actress: Scarlett Johansson in  Ghost World  and  The
Man Who Wasn’t There
Best Screenplay: Daniel Clowes and Terry Zwigoff for  Ghost World
Best Cinematography: (tie) Peter Deming for  From
Hell  and  Mulholland Drive  and Christopher Doyle and Mark Lee Ping-
bin for  In The Mood For Love
Best Music: Mihály Vig for  The Werckmeister Harmonies
Best Production Design: Edward T. McAvoy for  Ghost World
Best Costume Design: Mary Zophres for  Ghost World
Sominex Award:
Dramamine Award:
Mechanical Actor:
Mechanical Actress:
2002  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture: (tie)  Far From Heaven  and  The Son’s Room
Best Director: (tie) Todd Haynes for  Far From Heaven  and Aleksandr
Sokurov for  Russian Ark
Best Actor: Greg Kinnear in  Auto Focus
Best Actress: (tie) Emmanuelle Devos in  Read My Lips  and Julianne
Moore in  Far From Heaven  and Samantha Morton in  Minority
Report  and  Morvern Callar
Best Supporting Actor: Eddie Izzard in  The Cat’s Meow
Best Supporting Actress: Patricia Clarkson in  Far From Heaven
Best Screenplay: Bill Condon for  Chicago
Best Cinematography: Tilman Büttner for  Russian Ark
Best Music: Elmer Bernstein for  Far From Heaven
Best Production Design: Mark Friedberg for  Far From Heaven
Best Costume Design: Sandy Powell for  Far From Heaven  and  Gangs
Of New York
Sominex Award:  Naqoyqatsi
Dramamine Award:  Bowling For Dollars
Mechanical Actor: Anthony Hopkins in  Red Dragon
Mechanical Actress: Catherine Keener in  Lovely And Amazing
2003  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Decasia
Best Director: Bill Morrison for  Decasia
Best Actor: Johnny Depp in  Pirates Of The Caribbean
Best Actress: Hope Davis in  American Splendor  and  The Secret Lives
Of Dentists
Best Supporting Actor: Max Pirkis in  Master and Commander: The
Far Side Of The World
Best Supporting Actress: Ludivine Sagnier in  Swimming Pool
Best Screenplay: Shari Springer Bergman and Robert Pulcini
for American Splendor
Best Cinematography: Peter Suschitzky for  Spider
Best Music: Michael Gordon for  Decasia
Best Production Design: Andrew Laws for  Down With Love
Best Costume Design: Daniel Orlandi for  Down With Love
Sominex Award:
Dramamine Award:  In My Skin
Mechanical Actor: Anthony Hopkins in  The Human Stain
Mechanical Actress: Nicole Kidman in  The Human Stain
2004  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Kinsey
Best Director: Bill Condon for  Kinsey
Best Actor: Ethan Hawke in  Before Sunset
Best Actress: Laura Linney in  Kinsey  and  P.S.
Best Supporting Actor: Peter Sarsgaard in  Kinsey
Best Supporting Actress: Kirsten Dunst in  Eternal Sunshine Of The
Spotless Mind
Best Screenplay: Bill Condon for  Kinsey
Best Cinematography: Christopher Doyle for  Hero, Last Life In The
Universe and  Days Of Being Wild
Best Music: Alberto Iglesias for  Bad Education
Best Production Design: Dante Ferretti for  The Aviator
Best Costume Design: Emi Wada for  Hero  and  House Of The Flying
Daggers
Sominex Award:  The Village
Dramamine Award:  The Passion Of The Christ
Mechanical Actor: Cate Blanchett in  The Aviator
Mechanical Actress: Anthony Hopkins in  Alexander
2005  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Mysterious Skin
Best Director: Gregg Araki for  Mysterious Skin
Best Actor: Joseph Gordon-Leavitt in  Mysterious Skin
Best Actress: Maria Bello in  A History Of Violence
Best Supporting Actor: Paddy Constantine in  My Summer Of Love
Best Supporting Actress: Catherine Keener in  Capote
Best Screenplay: Gregg Araki for  Mysterious Skin
Best Cinematography: Robert Elswit for  Good Night And Good
Luck  and  Syriana
Best Music: Howard Shore for  A History Of Violence
Best Production Design: William Chang Suk Ping for  2046
Best Costume Design: William Chang Suk Ping for  2046
Sominex Award: Saraband
Dramamine Award: Crash
Mechanical Actor: Tom Cruise for  War Of The Worlds
Mechanical Actress: Dakota Fanning for  War Of The Worlds
Complete coverage of the 2005 IRAs here.
2006  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  L’Enfant
Best Director: Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne for  L’Enfant
Best Actor: Ryan Gosling in  Half Nelson
Best Actress: Maggie Cheung in  Clean
Best Supporting Actor: Anthony Mackie in  Half Nelson
Best Supporting Actress: Carmen Maura in  Volver
Best Screenplay: (tie) Guillermo Del Toro for  Pan’s Labyrinth  and
Jean- Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne for  L’Enfant
Best Cinematography: Emmanuel Lubezki for  Children Of Men
Best Production Design: Eugenio Caballero for  Pan’s Labyrinth
Best Music: Philip Glass for  Notes On A Scandal  and  The Illusionist
Best Costume Design: Sharon Davis for  Dreamgirls
Sominex Award:  The Da Vinci Code
Dramamine Award:  Babel
Mechanical Actor: Robert Downey, Jr. in  Fur and  A Scanner Darkly
Mechanical Actress: Julianne Moore in  Children Of Men
Complete coverage of the 2006 IRAs here.
2007  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert
Ford
Best Director: Andrew Dominik for  The Assassination Of Jesse James
By The Coward Robert Ford
Best Actor: Casey Affleck in  The Assassination Of Jesse James By The
Coward Robert Ford  and  Gone Baby Gone
Best Actress: Marina Hands in  Lady Chatterley
Best Supporting Actor: Paul Schneider in  The Assassination Of Jesse
James By The Coward Robert Ford and  Lars And The Real Girl
Best Supporting Actress: Amy Ryan in  Gone Baby Gone
Best Screenplay: Corneliu Porumboiu for  12:08 East Of Bucharest
Best Cinematography: Roger Deakins for  The Assassination Of Jesse
James By The Coward Robert Ford, In The Valley Of Elah  and  No
Country For Old Men
Best Production Design: Patricia Norris for  The Assassination Of Jesse
James By The Coward Robert Ford
Best Music: Nick Cave and Warren Ellis for  The Assassination Of Jesse
James By The Coward Robert Ford
Best Costume Design: Patricia Norris for  The Assassination Of Jesse
James By The Coward Robert Ford
Sominex Award:  Youth Without Youth
Dramamine Award:  Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead
Mechanical Actor: John Travolta in  Hairspray
Mechanical Actress: Meryl Streep in  Lions For Lambs  and  Rendition
Complete coverage of the 2007 IRAs here.
2008  IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  The Edge Of Heaven
Best Director: Fatih Akin -  The Edge Of Heaven
Best Actor: Michael Shannon -  Shotgun Stories
Best Actress: Anamaria Marinca -  4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
Best Supporting Actor: Emile Hirsch -  Milk
Best Supporting Actress: Hanna Schygulla -  The Edge Of Heaven
Best Screenplay: Fatih Akin -  The Edge Of Heaven
Best Cinematography: Jody Shapiro -  My Winnipeg
Best Production Design: Rejean Labrie -  My Winnipeg
Best Music: Carter Burwell for  In Bruges  and  Burn After Reading
Best Costumes: Danny Glicker -  Milk
Sominex:  The Happening
Dramamine:  The Reader
Mechanical Actor: Mark Wahlberg for  The Happening
Mechanical Actress: Meryl Streep for  Doubt
Complete coverage of the 2008 IRAs here.
2009 IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  Hunger
Best Director: Olivier Assayas -  Summer Hours
Best Actor: Sharlto Copley -  District 9
Best Actress: Catalina Saavedra -  The Maid
Best Supporting Actor: Liam Cunningham -  Hunger
Best Supporting Actress: Anna Faris -  Observe And Report
Best Screenplay: Olivier Assayas -  Summer Hours
Best Cinematography: Sean Bobbitt -  Hunger
Best Production Design: Philip Ivey -  District 9
Best Music: Marvin Hamlisch -  The Informant!
Best Costumes: Janet Patterson -  Bright Star
Sominex:  Public Enemies
Dramamine:  Anti-Christ
Mechanical Actor: Peter Sarsgaard for  An Education
Mechanical Actress: Hilary Swank for  Amelia
2010 IRA Film Award Winners
Best Picture:  A Prophet/Un Prophete
Best Director: Jacques Audiard -  A Prophet/Un Prophete
Best Actor: Edgar Ramirez -  Carlos
Best Actress: Tilda Swinton -  I Am Love
Best Supporting Actor: Niels Arestrup -  A Prophet/Un Prophete
Best Supporting Actress: Dale Dickey -  Winter's Bone
Best Screenplay: Thomas Bidegain and Jacques Audiard -  A
Prophet/Un Prophete
Best Cinematography: Yorick Le Saux -  I Am Love
Best Production Design: Francesca Balestra Di Mottola -  I Am Love
Best Music: John Adams -  I Am Love
Best Costumes: Antonella Cannarozzi -  I Am Love
Sominex:  Cairo Time
Dramamine:  Black Swan
Mechanical Actor: Vincent Cassel for  Black Swan
Mechanical Actress: Natalie Portman for  Black Swan
The Governor Scott Walker Award For Achievement In Political
Thuggery:  Waiting For "Superman"
Complete coverage of the 2010 IRAs here .
2011 IRA FILM AWARD WINNERS
Best Picture:  The Tree Of Life
Best Director: Terrence Malick -  The Tree Of Life
Best Actor: Peyman Moadi -  A Separation
Best Actress: Leila Hatami -  A Separation
Best Supporting Actor: Hunter McCracken -  The Tree Of Life
Best Supporting Actress: Sareh Bayet -  A Separation
Best Screenplay: Ashgar Farhadi -  A Separation
Best Cinematography: Emmanuel Lubezki -  The Tree Of Life
Best Production Design: Dante Ferretti -  Hugo
Best Score: Alberto Iglesias -  Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy  and  The Skin I
Live In
Best Editing: Hank Corwin, Jay Rabinowitz, Daniel Rezende, Billy
Weber, Mark Yoshikawa -  The Tree Of Life
Best Costumes: Jacqueline Durran -  Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
Sominex Award (The Movie That Put Us To Sleep):  Midnight In Paris
Dramamine Award (The Movie That Made Us Sick):  The Help
Mechanical Actress: Meryl Streep -  The Iron Lady
Mechanical Actor: Owen Wilson -  Midnight In Paris
Complete coverage of the 2011 IRAs here.
2012 IRA FILM AWARD WINNERS
Best Picture:  Once Upon A Time In Anatolia
Best Director: Nuri Bilge Ceylan -  Once Upon A Time In Anatolia
Best Actor: Jean-Louis Trintignant -  Amour
Best Actress: Rachel Weisz -  The Deep Blue Sea
Best Supporting Actor: Taner Birsel -  Once Upon A Time In Anatolia
Best Supporting Actress: Cecile De France -  The Kid With A Bike
Best Screenplay: Ebru Ceylan and Nuri Bilge Ceylan and Ercan Kesal
- Once Upon A Time In Anatolia
Best Cinematography: Gokhan Tiryaki -  Once Upon A Time In Anatolia
Best Production Design: Arvinder Grewal -  Cosmopolis
Best Score: Dan Romer and Benh Zeitlin -  Beasts Of The Southern Wild
Best Editing: Todd Woody Richman and Tyler H. Walk -  How To
Survive A Plague
Best Costumes: Kari Perkins - Bernie
Sominex Award (The Movie That Put Us To Sleep): (tie)  Les
Miserables and Beasts Of The Southern Wild
Dramamine Award (The Movie That Made Us Sick):  The Intouchables
Mechanical Actress: Anne Hathaway -  Les Miserables
Mechanical Actor: Russell Crowe -  Les Miserables
Complete coverage of the 2012 IRAs here.
2013 IRA FILM AWARD WINNERS
Best Picture:  Laurence Anyways
Best Director: Xavier Dolan for  Laurence Anyways and  I Killed My
Mother
Best Actor: Joaquin Phoenix for  Her
Best Actress: Hadas Yaron for  Fill The Void
Best Supporting Actor: Daniel Bruhl for  The Fifth Estate and  Rush
Best Supporting Actress:  Nathalie Baye  for Laurence Anyways
Best Screenplay: Sarah Polley for  Stories We Tell
Best Cinematography:  Asaf Sudri  for Fill The Void
Best Production Design:  K.K. Barrett  for Her
Best Score: (tie) Alex Ebert for  All Is Lost  and Arcade Fire for  Her
Best Editing:  Mike Munn  for Stories We Tell
Best Costumes:  Francois Barbeau, Xavier Dolan  for Laurence Anyways
Sominex Award (The Movie That Put Us To Sleep):  Faust
Dramamine Award (The Movie That Made Us Sick):  The Great Gatsby
Mechanical Actress:  Meryl Streep for  August: Osage County
Mechanical Actor:  Jared Leto for  Dallas Buyers Club
Complete coverage of the 2013 IRAs here. 
2014 IRA FILM AWARD WINNERS
Best Picture:  Nightcrawler
Best Director: Dan Gilroy for Nightcrawler
Best Actor: Jake Gyllenhaal for Nightcrawler
Best Actress: Essie Davis for  The Babadook
Best Supporting Actor: Ethan Hawke for Boyhood
Best Supporting Actress:  Agata Kulesza  for Ida
Best Screenplay:   Dan Gilroy for  Nightcrawler
Best Cinematography:  Robert Elswit for  Nightcrawler and Inherent
Vice
Best Production Design: Suzie Davies  for Mr. Turner
Best Score:  Mica Levi for Under The Skin
Best Editing: (tie) Simon Njoo for The Babadook;  Jay Cassidy, Stuart
Levy and Conor O'Neill for Foxcatcher
Best Costumes: (tie) Kasia Walicka-Maimone  for Foxcatcher and A
Most Violent Year (but not St. Vincent); Jacqueline Durran for Mr.
Turner
Sominex Award (The Movie That Put Us To Sleep): The Monuments
Men
Dramamine Award (The Movie That Made Us Sick):  The Imitation
Game
Mechanical Actress: Lilla Crawford  for Into The Woods
Mechanical Actor: The Entire Cast of  The Monuments Men
IRA BEST PICTURE WINNERS
Barry Lyndon (1975)
Lipstick  and  The Marquise Of O (tie) (1976)
Annie Hall (1977)
Days Of Heaven (1978)
Fedora (1979)
The Big Red One (1980)
Cutter’s Way (1981)
Victor/Victoria (1982)
Berlin Alexanderplatz (1983)
L’Argent  and  Once Upon A Time In America (tie) (1984)
Prizzi’s Honor (1985)
Eyes On The Prize (1986)
Housekeeping (1987)
Dead Ringers (1988)
Story Of Women (1989)
GoodFellas (1990)
The Man In The Moon (1991)
Raise The Red Lantern (1992)
Six Degrees Of Separation (1993)
Red (1994)
Exotica (1995)
La Ceremonie (1996)
Crash  (the David Cronenberg film) and  Grosse Pointe Blank (tie)
(1997)
Gods And Monsters (1998)
Fight Club (1999)
L’ Humanite (2000)
The Werckmeister Harmonies (2001)
Far From Heaven  and  The Son’s Room (tie) (2002)
Decasia (2003)
Kinsey (2004)
Mysterious Skin (2005)
L’Enfant (2006)
The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford (2007)
The Edge Of Heaven (2008)
Hunger (2009)
A Prophet/Un Prophete (2010)
The Tree Of Life (2011)
Once Upon A Time In Anatolia (2012)
Laurence Anyways (2013)
Nightcrawler (2014)
THE IRA AWARDS: THE TOP 100 FILMS OF THE 1950s
1. The Earrings of Madame de… (Max Ophüls, 1953)
2. Touch of Evil  (Orson Welles, 1958)
3. Vertigo  (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958)
4. Rear Window  (Alfred Hitchcock, 1954) 
5. The Searchers  (John Ford, 1956) 
6. In a Lonely Place  (Nicholas Ray, 1950) 
7. Anatomy of a Murder  (Otto Preminger, 1959) 
8. Tokyo Story  (Yasujiro Ozu, 1953) 
9. North by Northwest  (Alfred Hitchcock, 1959) 
10. Pickpocket  (Robert Bresson, 1959) 
See the complete list of the Top 100 Films Of The 1950s here. 
THE IRA AWARDS: THE TOP 100 FILMS OF THE 1960s
1. Psycho  (Alfred Hitchcock, 1960)
2. The Apartment  (Billy Wilder, 1960)
3. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance  (John Ford, 1962)
4. 2001: A Space Odyssey  (Stanley Kubrick, 1968)
5. Chimes At Midnight  (Orson Welles, 1965)
6. Once Upon A Time In The West  (Sergio Leone, 1968) 
7. The Birds  (Alfred Hitchcock, 1963) 
8. Marnie  (Alfred Hitchcock, 1964) 
9. When A Woman Ascends The Stairs  (Mikio Naruse, 1960)
10. Contempt  (Jean-Luc Godard, 1963)....
See the complete list here.
THE IRA AWARDS: THE BEST FILMS OF THE 2000s (voted
in 2010)
1. The Son/Le Fils (Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne, 2002)
2. Zodiac (David Fincher, 2007)
3. Yi Yi (Edward Yang, 2000)
4. The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford
(Andrew Dominik, 2007)
5. The Edge Of Heaven (Fatih Akin, 2007)  (tie)
In The Mood For Love (Kar Wai Wong, 2000)  (tie)
7. The Heart Of The World (Guy Maddin, 2001)
8. Mysterious Skin (Gregg Araki, 2004)  (tie)
Bus 174 (José Padilha and Felipe Lacerda, 2002)  (tie)
10. The Death Of Mr. Lazarescu (Cristi Puiu, 2005)  (tie)
Head-On (Fatih Akin, 2004)  (tie)
Spirited Away (Hayao Miyazaki, 2001)  (tie)
THE IRA AWARDS: THE TOP 100 FILMS OF ALL TIME
1. The Rules Of The Game (Jean Renoir, 1939)
2. The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles, 1942)
3. Citizen Kane (Orson Welles, 1941)
4. Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958)
5. The Searchers (John Ford, 1956)
6. Letter From An Unknown Woman (Max Ophüls, 1948)
7. The Big Sleep (Howard Hawks, 1946)
8. Psycho (Alfred Hitchcock, 1960)
9. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (John Ford, 1962)
10. The Apartment (Billy Wilder, 1960)
See the complete list of the Top 100 Films Of All Time here.
POSTED BY MICHAEL GILTZ AT 1:20 PM


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