The New Jersey Film Critics Circle has announced its picks for best of 2025! The winners are in bold!
Best Picture Hamnet It Was Just An Accident Marty Supreme No Other Choice One Battle After Another (WINNER) The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sinners (RUNNER-UP) Train Dreams Weapons
Best Director Chloé Zhao – Hamnet Park Chan-wook – No Other Choice Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another (WINNER) Joachim Trier – Sentimental Value Ryan Coogler – Sinners (RUNNER-UP)
Best Original Screenplay It Was Just An Accident Marty Supreme (RUNNER-UP) Sentimental Value Sinners (WINNER) Weapons
Best Adapted Screenplay Bugonia Hamnet No Other Choice (RUNNER-UP) One Battle After Another (WINNER) Train Dreams
Best Actor Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme (WINNER) Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another Joel Edgerton – Train Dreams Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon Michael B. Jordan – Sinners (RUNNER-UP)
Best Actress Jessie Buckley – Hamnet (WINNER) Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (RUNNER-UP) Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value Emma Stone – Bugonia
Best Supporting Actor Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another (RUNNER-UP) Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein Delroy Lindo – Sinners Sean Penn – One Battle After Another Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value (WINNER)
Best Supporting Actress Elle Fanning – Sentimental Value Ariana Grande – Wicked: For Good Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value (RUNNER-UP) Amy Madigan – Weapons (WINNER) Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
Best Acting Ensemble Marty Supreme One Battle After Another (WINNER) Sentimental Value Sinners (RUNNER-UP) Weapons
Best Original Score F1 Hamnet Marty Supreme (RUNNER-UP) One Battle After Another Sinners (WINNER)
Best Original Song “Drive” – F1 “Golden” – KPop Demon Hunters (WINNER) “I Lied to You” – Sinners (RUNNER-UP) “Last Time (I Seen the Sun)” – Sinners “Train Dreams” – Train Dreams
Best Editing F1 (RUNNER-UP) Marty Supreme No Other Choice One Battle After Another (WINNER) Sinners
Best Production Design Frankenstein (WINNER) Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners (RUNNER-UP) Wicked: For Good
Best Costume Design Frankenstein (WINNER) Hamnet Hedda Sinners Wicked: For Good (RUNNER-UP)
Best Hair and Makeup Frankenstein (WINNER) Sinners The Smashing Machine Weapons (RUNNER-UP) Wicked: For Good
Best Sound F1 (RUNNER-UP) One Battle After Another Sinners Sirāt Warfare (WINNER)
Best Animated Feature Arco (RUNNER-UP) Elio Little Amélie or the Character of Rain KPop Demon Hunters (WINNER) Zootopia 2
Best International Feature It Was Just An Accident No Other Choice (WINNER) The Secret Agent Sentimental Value (RUNNER-UP) Sirāt
Best Documentary 2000 Meters to Andriivka Come See Me in the Good Light (RUNNER-UP) Orwell: 2+2=5 The Perfect Neighbor (WINNER) Predators
Best Cinematography Hamnet No Other Choice One Battle After Another Sinners (RUNNER-UP) Train Dreams (WINNER)
Best Visual Effects Avatar: Fire and Ash (WINNER) F1 Frankenstein (RUNNER-UP) Sinners Superman
Best Stunts F1 (RUNNER-UP) Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning (WINNER) One Battle After Another The Running Man Sinners
Best Directorial Debut The Chronology of Water Friendship Pillion (RUNNER-UP) Sorry, Baby (WINNER) The Ugly Stepsister
Best Breakthrough Performance Miles Caton – Sinners (RUNNER-UP) Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another (WINNER) Jacobi Jupe – Hamnet Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby
Best Animal in a Movie Bing the Dog – The Friend Googoo the Meerkat – Left-Handed Girl Indy the Dog – Good Boy (WINNER) Noochie the Cat – Sorry, Baby (RUNNER-UP) Tonic the Cat – Caught Stealing
Best LGBTQIA+ Representation Blue Moon Hedda Pillion (RUNNER-UP) Plainclothes Twinless (WINNER)
Best New Jersey Representation The Housemaid Marty Supreme (RUNNER-UP) Ponyboi Presence Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere (WINNER)
The Minnesota Film Critics Association has announced its nominations for the best of 2025. And here they are:
Best Picture Hamnet Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sentimental Value Sinners
Best Director Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another Ryan Coogler – Sinners Josh Safdie – Marty Supreme Joachim Trier – Sentimental Value Chloé Zhao – Hamnet
Best Actor Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another Joel Edgerton – Train Dreams Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon Michael B. Jordan – Sinners
Best Actress Jessie Buckley – Hamnet Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value Amanda Seyfried – The Testament of Ann Lee
Best Supporting Actor Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein Paul Mescal – Hamnet Sean Penn – One Battle After Another Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value
Best Supporting Actress Elle Fanning – Sentimental Value Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Amy Madigan – Weapons Wunmi Mosaku – Sinners Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
Best Ensemble Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sentimental Value Sinners Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Best Adapted Screenplay Frankenstein – Guillermo del Toro Hamnet – Chloé Zhao, Maggie O’Farrell No Other Choice – Lee Ja-hye, Lee Kyoung-mi, Don McKellar, Park Chan-wook One Battle After Another – Paul Thomas Anderson Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery – Rian Johnson
Best Original Screenplay It Was Just an Accident – Jafar Panahi Marty Supreme – Ronald Bronstein, Josh Safdie Sentimental Value – Joachim Trier, Eskil Vogt Sinners – Ryan Coogler Weapons – Zach Cregger
Best Film Editing F1 Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners Weapons
Best Cinematography Frankenstein Hamnet One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
Best Music Hamnet KPop Demon Hunters Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners
Best Costume Design Frankenstein Hamnet Marty Supreme Sinners Wicked: For Good
Best Makeup and Hairstyling Frankenstein Marty Supreme Sinners The Smashing Machine Wicked: For Good
Best Production Design Frankenstein Hamnet Marty Supreme Sinners Wicked: For Good
Best Sound F1 Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning One Battle After Another Sinners Warfare
Best Special Effects Avatar: Fire and Ash Frankenstein Sinners Superman Tron: Ares
Best Stunt Choreography Ballerina F1 Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning One Battle After Another Sinners
Best International Feature It Was Just an Accident – France, Iran, Luxembourg No Other Choice – South Korea The Secret Agent – Brazil, France, Germany, Netherlands Sentimental Value – Denmark, France, Germany, Norway, Sweden, United Kingdom The Ugly Stepsister – Denmark, Norway, Poland, Sweden
Best Animated Feature Arco Dog Man Elio KPop Demon Hunters Zootopia 2
Here are the 2025 Nominations of the Puerto Rico Critics Association!
Best Picture Frankenstein It Was Just an Accident One Battle After Another The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sinners Sirāt The Testament of Ann Lee
Best Puerto Rican Film @-Amor Esta Isla Parto
Best Director Ryan Coogler – Sinners Mona Fastvold – The Testament of Ann Lee Oliver Laxe – Sirāt Jafar Panahi – It Was Just an Accident Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another Chloé Zhao – Hamnet
Best Actor Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another Joel Edgerton – Train Dreams Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon Michael B. Jordan – Sinners Wagner Moura – The Secret Agent
Best Actress Jessie Buckley – Hamnet Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Jennifer Lawrence – Die, My Love Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value Amanda Seyfried – The Testament of Ann Lee
Best Supporting Actor Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein Delroy Lindo – Sinners Paul Mescal – Hamnet Josh O’Connor – Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another
Best Supporting Actress Jodie Comer – 28 Years Later Mia Goth – Frankenstein Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Amy Madigan – Weapons Wunmi Mosaku – Sinners Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
Best Adapted Screenplay 28 Years Later Frankenstein Hamnet No Other Choice One Battle After Another Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Best Original Screenplay It Was Just an Accident The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sinners Sorry, Baby Weapons
Best Animated Feature Arco Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc Elio KPop Demon Hunters Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Zootopia 2
Best Documentary 2000 Meters to Andriivka Cover-Up Megadoc My Undesirable Friends: Part I – Last Air in Moscow The Perfect Neighbor Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk
Best International Feature It Was Just an Accident No Other Choice Resurrection The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sirāt
Best Action Film From the World of John Wick: Ballerina F1 Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning One Battle After Another Predator: Badlands Superman
Best Horror Film 28 Years Later Final Destination: Bloodlines Frankenstein Sinners The Ugly Stepsister Weapons
Best Comedy/Musical If I Had Legs I’d Kick You The Naked Gun No Other Choice One Battle After Another The Testament of Ann Lee Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Best First Film The Chronology of Water Eephus Lurker Sorry, Baby The Ugly Stepsister Urchin
Best Cinematography 28 Years Later Frankenstein One Battle After Another Sinners Sirāt Train Dreams
Best Costume Design Frankenstein Hamnet The Phoenician Scheme Sinners The Testament of Ann Lee Wicked: For Good
Best Film Editing It Was Just an Accident No Other Choice One Battle After Another The Secret Agent Sinners Sirāt
Best Hair & Makeup 28 Years Later Frankenstein Sinners The Testament of Ann Lee The Ugly Stepsister Wicked: For Good
Best Production Design Frankenstein Hamnet Sentimental Value Sinners The Testament of Ann Lee Wicked: For Good
Best Original Score Frankenstein Hamnet One Battle After Another Sinners Sirāt The Testament of Ann Lee
Best Original Song Lowly – 28 Years Later The Risk – A Big Bold Beautiful Journey Golden – KPop Demon Hunters I Lied to You – Sinners Clothed by the Sun – The Testament of Ann Lee Train Dreams – Train Dreams
Best Sound Avatar: Fire and Ash F1 Frankenstein One Battle After Another Sinners Sirāt
Best Visual Effects 28 Years Later Avatar: Fire and Ash F1 Frankenstein Sinners Tron: Ares
Here are the 2025 nominations of the New Jersey Film Critics Circle.
Best Picture Hamnet It Was Just An Accident Marty Supreme No Other Choice One Battle After Another The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sinners Train Dreams Weapons
Best Director Chloé Zhao – Hamnet Park Chan-wook – No Other Choice Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another Joachim Trier – Sentimental Value Ryan Coogler – Sinners
Best Original Screenplay It Was Just An Accident Marty Supreme Sentimental Value Sinners Weapons
Best Adapted Screenplay Bugonia Hamnet No Other Choice One Battle After Another Train Dreams
Best Actor Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another Joel Edgerton – Train Dreams Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon Michael B. Jordan – Sinners
Best Actress Jessie Buckley – Hamnet Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value Emma Stone – Bugonia
Best Supporting Actor Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein Delroy Lindo – Sinners Sean Penn – One Battle After Another Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value
Best Supporting Actress Elle Fanning – Sentimental Value Ariana Grande – Wicked: For Good Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Amy Madigan – Weapons Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
Best Acting Ensemble Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sentimental Value Sinners Weapons
Best Original Score F1 Hamnet Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners
Best Original Song “Drive” – F1 “Golden” – KPop Demon Hunters “I Lied to You” – Sinners “Last Time (I Seen the Sun)” – Sinners “Train Dreams” – Train Dreams
Best Editing F1 Marty Supreme No Other Choice One Battle After Another Sinners
Best Production Design Frankenstein Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners Wicked: For Good
Best Costume Design Frankenstein Hamnet Hedda Sinners Wicked: For Good
Best Hair and Makeup Frankenstein Sinners The Smashing Machine Weapons Wicked: For Good
Best Sound F1 One Battle After Another Sinners Sirāt Warfare
Best Animated Feature Arco Elio Little Amélie or the Character of Rain KPop Demon Hunters Zootopia 2
Best International Feature It Was Just An Accident No Other Choice The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sirāt
Best Documentary 2000 Meters to Andriivka Come See Me in the Good Light Orwell: 2+2=5 The Perfect Neighbor Predators
Best Cinematography Hamnet No Other Choice One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
Best Visual Effects Avatar: Fire and Ash F1 Frankenstein Sinners Superman
Best Stunts F1 Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning One Battle After Another The Running Man Sinners
Best Directorial Debut The Chronology of Water Friendship Pillion Sorry, Baby The Ugly Stepsister
Best Breakthrough Performance Miles Caton – Sinners Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Jacobi Jupe – Hamnet Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby
Best Animal in a Movie Bing the Dog – The Friend Googoo the Meerkat – Left-Handed Girl Indy the Dog – Good Boy Noochie the Cat – Sorry, Baby Tonic the Cat – Caught Stealing
Best LGBTQIA+ Representation Blue Moon Hedda Pillion Plainclothes Twinless
Best New Jersey Representation* The Housemaid Marty Supreme Ponyboi Presence Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere
“The fire came from the mountain… Eywa did not come. So I went to the fire, and I learned its way” – Varang
Avatar: Fire and Ash plays like a massive, molten crescendo for Cameron’s Pandora saga—visually overwhelming, emotionally heavier than the last two entries, but also very familiar in ways that will either feel comfortingly mythic or a little déjà vu, depending on your tolerance for repetition. The ash-choked skies, lava rivers, and volcanic Na’vi clans are often more compelling than some of the story beats, and the final stretch delivers the kind of operatic, war-movie scale that makes the three-plus-hour runtime go down easier than it should, even though the film clearly didn’t need to run this long.
This time around, the series leaves behind the cool blues and oceanic calm of the previous chapter for a harsher, volcanic corner of Pandora that feels like a nature documentary shot in a furnace. Jagged black rock, roiling lava, and smoke-stained skies dominate the frame, with creatures and plant life that look as if they evolved to survive heat and ash rather than coral reefs and open water, giving the movie an immediately distinct visual identity even when the story rhythms feel familiar.
At the center of this environment are the Ash People, or Mangkwan clan, a Na’vi group shaped by relentless scarcity and violence. They ride creatures adapted to fire and ash instead of waves, cover themselves in soot-black markings, and fight using a deliberate blend of traditional Na’vi weaponry and repurposed human tech, putting them ideologically at odds not just with the human invaders, but with other Na’vi clans who still cling to older, more spiritual ways of living with Eywa.
The story picks up with Jake and Neytiri’s family still reeling from Neteyam’s death, and the film leans hard into unresolved grief as its emotional baseline. Jake doubles down on his protector persona, treating every decision as a matter of survival, while Neytiri’s pain expresses itself as barely controlled rage, and that emotional weather trickles down to their children, who are increasingly frustrated at being treated like liabilities. The problem is that a lot of this family dysfunction was already unpacked in the second film, so instead of evolving those arcs, the script often feels like it is rehashing earlier conflicts.
The dynamic between Jake and Lo’ak is the clearest example of this repetition. Jake’s exasperation with Lo’ak’s impulsive, run-toward-the-bullets mentality resurfaces again and again, echoing arguments audiences have already seen: the father insisting his son isn’t ready, the son bristling at never being trusted. These moments still have emotional sting, but they circle the same drain so often that entire conversations could have been trimmed or removed without sacrificing character depth, and tightening that thread alone would have shaved a noticeable chunk off the runtime.
Where the film becomes more thematically interesting is in how it reframes Pandora’s conflict. Instead of a simple “Na’vi versus humans” setup, it pits the more traditional Na’vi clans—those still committed to a symbiotic relationship with Eywa—against the Ash People, whose warlike nature and embrace of human weaponry make them ideological outliers. That split plays as a pointed echo of historical events in the Americas, where European colonial powers armed and favored specific Indigenous nations to fight their neighbors, turning native communities into proxies in conflicts that ultimately benefitted outsiders more than the people doing the actual bleeding.
The analogy becomes sharper in how human forces hang back and quietly exploit these new divisions. By giving the Ash People access to superior firepower and nudging them toward confrontation, the outsiders effectively inflame existing grievances and reshape local power dynamics, much like colonial regimes once did by supplying guns and promises to one group while framing another as the enemy. The result is a Pandora that feels more fractured and politically complex, where internal Na’vi conflict is as dangerous as external invasion.
Varang, the leader of the Ash People, is one of the film’s strongest assets. She’s portrayed as a true believer who has taken real suffering and twisted it into a doctrine of purifying destruction, convinced that burning the world is the only way to save it. The character blends zealotry and charisma in a way that makes her both frightening and compelling, and she wields faith, desire, and fear as weapons with unnerving ease, giving the movie a volatile energy whenever she’s on-screen.
Her alliance with Quaritch pushes the story into darker, more uncomfortable territory. What begins as a pragmatic arrangement—a trade of firepower and influence for help tracking Jake—evolves into a twisted, intimate partnership that underlines just how far both are willing to go to achieve their goals. Their connection is meant to feel toxic and predatory, and it succeeds on that front, though some viewers may find the intensity of those scenes off-putting compared with the relatively straightforward romance and family dynamics of earlier entries.
On a craft level, the film is almost absurdly polished. Even if it no longer feels like a quantum leap in visual effects, the execution is meticulous: volcanic vistas glow with molten light, ash storms swirl with tactile grit, and the interplay of fire, smoke, and bioluminescence gives many shots a painterly quality. The action sequences rely on clear geography and patient staging, so even when the screen is full of creatures, machines, and chaos, it remains surprisingly easy to track who is where and what’s at stake.
The final act is where the movie unleashes everything it has: parallel battles on land, in the air, and over volatile seas, stitched together into a long, escalating crescendo. Familiar James Cameron signatures return—heroic last-second saves, nature itself intervening, climaxes that mirror earlier films—but the pacing of these sequences is handled with enough control that they rarely collapse into pure noise. Still, you can’t help but feel that with a leaner, more disciplined buildup, that climax would have hit even harder.
Structurally, the story leans heavily on patterns that loyal viewers will recognize. There is yet another relocation to a new culture, another period of uneasy assimilation, another slow slide into open warfare, and another sacrificial, emotionally charged finale. Whether that comes across as mythic repetition or simple recycling depends on how patient you are with Cameron’s tendency to “rhyme” his narratives rather than reinvent them.
Most of the main character arcs feel like refinements rather than reinventions. Jake remains the guilt-ridden warrior father terrified of losing his children; Lo’ak edges closer to full-on protagonist status as the reckless but big-hearted son; Kiri’s mystical bond with Eywa deepens while remaining intentionally enigmatic; and Quaritch once again fills the role of relentless, personal antagonist. With the same father–son friction repeatedly dragged back into the spotlight, the emotional landscape can feel stuck in place, and a stricter editorial hand might have refocused attention on the fresher elements—like Varang and the Ash People’s worldview.
Tonally, the film pushes into darker territory while still staying within a mainstream rating. The battles feel more brutal, with a greater emphasis on the physical cost of arrows, explosions, and close-quarters fighting, and there’s a persistent sense that no one is truly safe. That harshness extends to the emotional side as well, as the Sully family finds itself cornered into choices where every option exacts a price, reinforcing the idea that survival in this version of Pandora demands constant compromise.
Thematically, Avatar: Fire and Ash weaves together ideas about faith, extremism, and the way trauma can be weaponized. The Ash People act as a distorted mirror of earlier Na’vi cultures: a society that has taken genuine pain and turned it into an excuse for cruelty, abandoning balance in favor of cleansing violence. Layered on top of that is the divide-and-rule dynamic, where more technologically advanced outsiders stoke internal conflicts for their own advantage, mirroring how colonial powers in the Americas encouraged Indigenous groups to fight one another while expanding their control and extracting resources.
Despite all the digital wizardry, the performances still manage to cut through. Jake and Neytiri’s scenes carry the weight of years of loss and sacrifice, and there’s a believable exhaustion in the way they argue and compromise. The younger characters, especially Lo’ak and Kiri, feel more rooted and central than they did before, which helps sell the gradual shift toward a new generation, even if the script keeps dragging them back through conflicts that feel like reruns instead of genuine evolution.
At the same time, the movie sometimes undercuts its best character work in its rush to reach the next big set piece. Quieter moments that might have deepened side characters or given the Ash People’s beliefs more nuance are often compressed or sidelined, while scenes rehashing Jake and Lo’ak’s issues are allowed to run long. If the film had trusted audiences to remember the family dysfunction carried over from the second installment and cut down on repeated arguments, those smaller, richer beats could have had more space—and the whole piece would likely feel tighter and more focused.
For viewers already invested in Pandora, Avatar: Fire and Ash is clearly built for the biggest screen available: the volcanic vistas, layered sound design, and carefully staged action set pieces are all engineered to overwhelm in the best way. It delivers a darker chapter without abandoning the earnest, sometimes corny sincerity that has always defined this series, and as a conclusion to this phase of the story, it feels emotionally full even as it insists on revisiting familiar territory and stretching its narrative longer than necessary.
For more casual viewers or anyone who found the earlier films predictable, this is unlikely to be the conversion point. The structure is recognizable, the dialogue is often workmanlike rather than sharp, and the movie leans so hard into repeating certain family conflicts that it can feel like the story is padding itself instead of evolving. But if you can live with those flaws—the repetition, the length, the occasional heavy hand—the combination of technical craftsmanship, volcanic imagery, heavy emotional stakes, and that quietly pointed commentary on colonial-era divide-and-rule tactics makes Avatar: Fire and Ash a fiery, flawed, but undeniably impressive ride.
Here are the 2025 nominations of the Utah Film Critics Association!
Best Picture
Hamnet
One Battle After Another
Sinners
Sorry, Baby
Train Dreams
Best Achievement in Directing
Chloé Zhao – Hamnet
Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby
Guillermo del Toro – Frankenstein
Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another
Ryan Coogler – Sinners
Best Lead Performance – Male
Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon
Joel Edgerton – Train Dreams
Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another
Michael B. Jordan – Sinners
Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme
Best Lead Performance – Female
Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another
Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby
Jessie Buckley – Hamnet
Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value
Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You
Best Supporting Performance – Male
Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another
Delroy Lindo – Sinners
Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein
Jacobi Jupe – Hamnet
Paul Mescal – Hamnet
Sean Penn – One Battle After Another
Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value
Best Supporting Performance – Female
Amy Madigan – Weapons
Ariana Grande – Wicked: For Good
Elle Fanning – Sentimental Value
Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
Wunmi Mosaku – Sinners
Best Ensemble
One Battle After Another
Sentimental Value
Sinners
Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Warfare
Vice/Martin Award for Performance in a Science-Fiction – Fantasy – or Horror Film
Alfie Williams – 28 Years Later
Amy Madigan – Weapons
Elle Fanning – Predator: Badlands
Indy the Dog – Good Boy
Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein
Best Screenplay
Hamnet
Marty Supreme
One Battle After Another
Sinners
Sorry, Baby
Best Cinematography
F1
Hamnet
One Battle After Another
Sinners
Train Dreams
Best Score
F1
Frankenstein
Hamnet
One Battle After Another
Sinners
Best Film Editing
F1
Marty Supreme
One Battle After Another
Sinners
Warfare
Best Visual Effects
Avatar: Fire And Ash
Frankenstein
Predator: Badlands
Sinners
Superman
Best Sound
F1
Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
One Battle After Another
Sinners
Warfare
Best Stunt Design
F1
From the World of John Wick: Ballerina
Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning
Predator: Badlands
The Running Man
Best Documentary Feature
2000 Meters to Andriivka
The Alabama Solution
Come See Me in the Good Light
The Librarians
Orwell: 2+2=5
The Perfect Neighbor
Best Animated Feature
Arco
Elio
K-Pop Demon Hunters
Little Amélie or the Character of Rain
Zootopia 2
Best Non-English Language Feature
It Was Just an Accident
No Other Choice
The Secret Agent
Sentimental Value
Sirāt
The Florida Film Critics Circle has announced its picks for the best of 2025. The winners are in bold.
BEST PICTURE Grand Tour The Mastermind No Other Choice (RUNNER-UP) One Battle After Another (WINNER) Sinners
ACTOR Lee Byung-hun (No Other Choice) Timothée Chalamet (Marty Supreme) Leonardo DiCaprio (One Battle After Another) Wagner Moura (The Secret Agent) Josh O’Connor (The Mastermind) (WINNER)
ACTRESS Crista Alfaiate (Grand Tour) Jessie Buckley (Hamnet) Rose Byrne (If I Had Legs I’d Kick You) (WINNER) Jennifer Lawrence (Die My Love) (RUNNER-UP) Renée Zellweger (Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy)
SUPPORTING ACTRESS Rita Cortese (Most People Die on Sundays) Amy Madigan (Weapons) Wunmi Mosaku (Sinners) (RUNNER-UP) Teyana Taylor (One Battle After Another) (WINNER) Mia Threapleton (The Phoenician Scheme)
SUPPORTING ACTOR Benicio del Toro (One Battle After Another) Jacques Develay (Misericordia) David Jonsson (The Long Walk) (RUNNER-UP) Delroy Lindo (Sinners) Sean Penn (One Battle After Another) (WINNER)
ENSEMBLE Eephus One Battle After Another (RUNNER-UP) The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sinners (WINNER)
DIRECTOR Ryan Coogler (Sinners) Bi Gan (Resurrection) Kelly Reichardt (The Mastermind) Paul Thomas Anderson (One Battle After Another) (RUNNER-UP) Park Chan-wook (No Other Choice) (WINNER)
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY The Astronaut Lovers (Marco Berger) If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (Mary Bronstein) It Was Just an Accident (Jafar Panahi) (WINNER) Rent Free (Fernando Andrés & Tyler Rugh) (RUNNER-UP) Sentimental Value (Eskil Vogt & Joachim Trier) Sinners (Ryan Coogler)
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Bugonia (Will Tracy) Hamnet (Chloé Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell) Little Amélie or the Character of Rain (Liane-Cho Han, Aude Py, Maïlys Vallade & Eddine Noël) No Other Choice (Park Chan-wook, Lee Kyoung-mi, Don McKellar, Lee Ja-hye) (RUNNER-UP) One Battle After Another (Paul Thomas Anderson) (WINNER)
CINEMATOGRAPHY Grand Tour (Gui Liang, Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, Rui Poças) One Battle After Another (Michael Bauman & Paul Thomas Anderson) Resurrection (Dong Jingsong) (WINNER) Sinners (Autumn Durald Arkapaw) (RUNNER-UP) Sirāt (Mauro Herce)
VISUAL EFFECTS Avatar: Fire and Ash (WINNER) Frankenstein (RUNNER-UP) No Other Choice Resurrection Sinners
EDITING Die My Love (Toni Froschhammer) (RUNNER-UP) No Other Choice (Kim Sang-bum & Kim Ho-bin) Marty Supreme (Ronald Bronstein & Josh Safdie) One Battle After Another (Andy Jurgensen) (WINNER) Sinners (Michael P. Shawver)
PRODUCTION DESIGN & ART DIRECTION Frankenstein (RUNNER-UP) The Phoenician Scheme Resurrection (WINNER) The Secret Agent Sinners
ORIGINAL SCORE The Mastermind (Rob Mazurek) (RUNNER-UP) One Battle After Another (Jonny Greenwood) Sinners (Ludwig Göransson) (WINNER) Sirāt (Kangding Ray) Resurrection (M83)
DOCUMENTARY BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions (RUNNER-UP)
The Perfect Neighbor Predators River of Grass Sabbath Queen (WINNER)
INTERNATIONAL FILM Grand Tour (WINNER TIE) It Was Just an Accident No Other Choice (WINNER TIE) Resurrection The Secret Agent Sirāt
ANIMATED FEATURE 100 Meters (RUNNER-UP) Arco KPop Demon Hunters Little Amélie or the Character of Rain (WINNER) Zootopia 2
FIRST FILM BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions Eephus (RUNNER-UP) Lurker Sorry, Baby (WINNER) The Ugly Stepsister
BREAKOUT AWARD Miles Caton (Sinners) Chase Infiniti (One Battle After Another) (WINNER) Jacobi Jupe (Hamnet) Théodore Pellerin (Lurker) Eva Victor (Sorry, Baby) (RUNNER-UP)
GOLDEN ORANGE River of Grass – Sasha Wortzel No Sleep Till – Alexandra Simpson
The Las Vegas Film Critics Society has announced its picks for the best of 2025. The winners are in bold.
BEST PICTURE Frankenstein Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
BEST ACTOR Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another Joel Edgerton – Train Dreams Michael B. Jordan – Sinners Jesse Plemons – Bugonia
BEST ACTRESS Jessie Buckley – Hamnet Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value Amanda Seyfried – The Testament of Ann Lee Emma Stone – Bugonia
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein Delroy Lindo – Sinners Sean Penn – One Battle After Another Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Emily Blunt – The Smashing Machine Elle Fanning – Sentimental Value Ariana Grande – Wicked: For Good Amy Madigan – Weapons Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
BEST DIRECTOR Guillermo del Toro – Frankenstein Josh Safdie – Marty Supreme Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another Ryan Coogler – Sinners Clint Bentley – Train Dreams
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Marty Supreme Sentimental Value Sinners Sorry, Baby Weapons
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Bugonia Frankenstein No Other Choice One Battle After Another Train Dreams
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY F1: The Movie Frankenstein One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
BEST FILM EDITING F1: The Movie Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
BEST SCORE F1: The Movie Frankenstein One Battle After Another Sinners Tron: Ares
BEST SONG Clothed by the Sun – The Testament of Ann Lee Drive – F1: The Movie Golden – KPop Demon Hunters I Lied to You – Sinners Train Dreams – Train Dreams
BEST DOCUMENTARY The Alabama Solution Come See Me in the Good Light Cover Up John Candy: I Like Me The Perfect Neighbor
BEST ANIMATED FILM Arco Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba The Movie: Infinity Castle In Your Dreams KPop Demon Hunters Zootopia 2
BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM It Was Just an Accident Left-Handed Girl No Other Choice Sentimental Value The Secret Agent
BEST COSTUME DESIGN Frankenstein Hamnet Kiss of the Spider Woman Sinners Wicked: For Good
BEST ART DIRECTION Avatar: Fire and Ash Frankenstein Marty Supreme Sinners Wicked: For Good
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS Avatar: Fire and Ash F1: The Movie Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning Superman The Fantastic Four: First Steps
BEST ACTION FILM From the World of John Wick: Ballerina Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning Predator: Badlands Superman The Running Man
BEST COMEDY Eternity Friendship The Ballad of Wallis Island The Naked Gun One of Them Days
BEST HORROR / SCI-FI 28 Years Later Bring Her Back Frankenstein Sinners The Long Walk
BEST FAMILY FILM How to Train Your Dragon KPop Demon Hunters Lilo & Stitch The Legend of Ochi Zootopia 2
BEST ANIMAL PERFORMANCE Bing, the Great Dane – The Friend Hercules, the Dog – Marty Supreme Indy – Good Boy Olga, the Cat – Sorry, Baby Richard and Baba – The Penguin Lessons
BEST ENSEMBLE Jay Kelly Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sentimental Value Sinners
BREAKOUT FILMMAKER Clint Bentley – Train Dreams Drew Hancock – Companion Emilie Blichfeldt – The Ugly Stepsister Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby James Sweeney – Twinless
BEST STUNTS F1: The Movie From the World of John Wick: Ballerina Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning Predator: Badlands The Running Man
YOUTH MALE PERFORMANCE (UNDER 21) Christian Convery – Frankenstein / The Monkey Jacobi Jupe – Hamnet John Wren Phillips – Bring Her Back Mason Thames – How to Train Your Dragon Miles Caton – Sinners
FEMALE YOUTH PERFORMANCE (UNDER 21) Helena Zengel – The Legend of Ochi Maia Kealoha – Lilo & Stitch Nina Ye – Left-Handed Girl Shannon Mahina Gorman – Rental Family Sora Wong – Bring Her Back
WILLIAM HOLDEN LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Kathryn Bigelow Barbara Broccoli Kathleen Kennedy Delroy Lindo Sigourney Weaver
Here are the 2025 nominations of the Las Vegas Film Critics Society.
BEST PICTURE Frankenstein Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
BEST ACTOR Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another Joel Edgerton – Train Dreams Michael B. Jordan – Sinners Jesse Plemons – Bugonia
BEST ACTRESS Jessie Buckley – Hamnet Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value Amanda Seyfried – The Testament of Ann Lee Emma Stone – Bugonia
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein Delroy Lindo – Sinners Sean Penn – One Battle After Another Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Emily Blunt – The Smashing Machine Elle Fanning – Sentimental Value Ariana Grande – Wicked: For Good Amy Madigan – Weapons Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
BEST DIRECTOR Guillermo del Toro – Frankenstein Josh Safdie – Marty Supreme Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another Ryan Coogler – Sinners Clint Bentley – Train Dreams
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Marty Supreme Sentimental Value Sinners Sorry, Baby Weapons
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Bugonia Frankenstein No Other Choice One Battle After Another Train Dreams
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY F1: The Movie Frankenstein One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
BEST FILM EDITING F1: The Movie Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
BEST SCORE F1: The Movie Frankenstein One Battle After Another Sinners Tron: Ares
BEST SONG Clothed by the Sun – The Testament of Ann Lee Drive – F1: The Movie Golden – KPop Demon Hunters I Lied to You – Sinners Train Dreams – Train Dreams
BEST DOCUMENTARY The Alabama Solution Come See Me in the Good Light Cover Up John Candy: I Like Me The Perfect Neighbor
BEST ANIMATED FILM Arco Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba The Movie: Infinity Castle In Your Dreams KPop Demon Hunters Zootopia 2
BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM It Was Just an Accident Left-Handed Girl No Other Choice Sentimental Value The Secret Agent
BEST COSTUME DESIGN Frankenstein Hamnet Kiss of the Spider Woman Sinners Wicked: For Good
BEST ART DIRECTION Avatar: Fire and Ash Frankenstein Marty Supreme Sinners Wicked: For Good
BEST VISUAL EFFECTS Avatar: Fire and Ash F1: The Movie Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning Superman The Fantastic Four: First Steps
BEST ACTION FILM From the World of John Wick: Ballerina Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning Predator: Badlands Superman The Running Man
BEST COMEDY Eternity Friendship The Ballad of Wallis Island The Naked Gun One of Them Days
BEST HORROR / SCI-FI 28 Years Later Bring Her Back Frankenstein Sinners The Long Walk
BEST FAMILY FILM How to Train Your Dragon KPop Demon Hunters Lilo & Stitch The Legend of Ochi Zootopia 2
BEST ANIMAL PERFORMANCE Bing, the Great Dane – The Friend Hercules, the Dog – Marty Supreme Indy – Good Boy Olga, the Cat – Sorry, Baby Richard and Baba – The Penguin Lessons
BEST ENSEMBLE Jay Kelly Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sentimental Value Sinners
BREAKOUT FILMMAKER Clint Bentley – Train Dreams Drew Hancock – Companion Emilie Blichfeldt – The Ugly Stepsister Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby James Sweeney – Twinless
BEST STUNTS F1: The Movie From the World of John Wick: Ballerina Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning Predator: Badlands The Running Man
YOUTH MALE PERFORMANCE (UNDER 21) Christian Convery – Frankenstein / The Monkey Jacobi Jupe – Hamnet John Wren Phillips – Bring Her Back Mason Thames – How to Train Your Dragon Miles Canton – Sinners
FEMALE YOUTH PERFORMANCE (UNDER 21) Helena Zengel – The Legend of Ochi Maia Kealoha – Lilo & Stitch Nina Ye – Left-Handed Girl Shannon Mahina Gorman – Rental Family Sora Wong – Bring Her Back
WILLIAM HOLDEN LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Kathryn Bigelow Barbara Broccoli Kathleen Kennedy Delroy Lindo Sigourney Weaver
Here are the quirky nominations of the Florida Film Critics Circle! Love you, Florida!
BEST PICTURE Grand Tour The Mastermind No Other Choice One Battle After Another Sinners
ACTOR Lee Byung-hun (No Other Choice) Timothée Chalamet (Marty Supreme) Leonardo DiCaprio (One Battle After Another) Wagner Moura (The Secret Agent) Josh O’Connor (The Mastermind)
ACTRESS Crista Alfaiate (Grand Tour) Jessie Buckley (Hamnet) Rose Byrne (If I Had Legs I’d Kick You) Jennifer Lawrence (Die My Love) Renée Zellweger (Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy)
SUPPORTING ACTRESS Rita Cortese (Most People Die on Sundays) Amy Madigan (Weapons) Wunmi Mosaku (Sinners) Teyana Taylor (One Battle After Another) Mia Threapleton (The Phoenician Scheme)
SUPPORTING ACTOR Benicio del Toro (One Battle After Another) Jacques Develay (Misericordia) David Jonsson (The Long Walk) Delroy Lindo (Sinners) Sean Penn (One Battle After Another)
ENSEMBLE Eephus One Battle After Another The Secret Agent Sentimental Value Sinners
DIRECTOR Ryan Coogler (Sinners) Bi Gan (Resurrection) Kelly Reichardt (The Mastermind) Paul Thomas Anderson (One Battle After Another) Park Chan-wook (No Other Choice)
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY The Astronaut Lovers (Marco Berger) If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (Mary Bronstein) It Was Just an Accident (Jafar Panahi) Rent Free (Fernando Andrés & Tyler Rugh) Sentimental Value (Eskil Vogt & Joachim Trier) Sinners (Ryan Coogler)
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Bugonia (Will Tracy) Hamnet (Chloé Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell) Little Amélie or the Character of Rain (Liane-Cho Han, Aude Py, Maïlys Vallade & Eddine Noël) No Other Choice (Park Chan-wook, Lee Kyoung-mi, Don McKellar, Lee Ja-hye) One Battle After Another (Paul Thomas Anderson)
CINEMATOGRAPHY Grand Tour (Gui Liang, Sayombhu Mukdeeprom, Rui Poças) One Battle After Another (Michael Bauman & Paul Thomas Anderson) Resurrection (Dong Jingsong) Sinners (Autumn Durald Arkapaw) Sirāt (Mauro Herce)
VISUAL EFFECTS Avatar: Fire and Ash Frankenstein No Other Choice Resurrection Sinners
EDITING Die My Love (Toni Froschhammer) No Other Choice (Kim Sang-bum & Kim Ho-bin) Marty Supreme (Ronald Bronstein & Josh Safdie) One Battle After Another (Andy Jurgensen) Sinners (Michael P. Shawver)
PRODUCTION DESIGN & ART DIRECTION Frankenstein The Phoenician Scheme Resurrection The Secret Agent Sinners
ORIGINAL SCORE The Mastermind (Rob Mazurek) One Battle After Another (Jonny Greenwood) Sinners (Ludwig Göransson) Sirāt (Kangding Ray) Resurrection (M83)
DOCUMENTARY BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions
The Perfect Neighbor Predators River of Grass Sabbath Queen
INTERNATIONAL FILM Grand Tour It Was Just an Accident No Other Choice Resurrection The Secret Agent Sirāt
ANIMATED FEATURE 100 Meters Arco KPop Demon Hunters Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Zootopia 2
FIRST FILM BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions Eephus Lurker Sorry, Baby The Ugly Stepsister
BREAKOUT AWARD Miles Caton (Sinners) Chase Infiniti (One Battle After Another) Jacobi Jupe (Hamnet) Théodore Pellerin (Lurker) Eva Victor (Sorry, Baby)
GOLDEN ORANGE River of Grass – Sasha Wortzel No Sleep Till – Alexandra Simpson