The Alliance of Women Film Journalists have announced their picks for the best of 2025! The winners are in bold!
BEST FILM FRANKENSTEIN HAMNET IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER THE SECRET AGENT SENTIMENTAL VALUE SINNERS TRAIN DREAMS
BEST DIRECTOR Paul Thomas Anderson – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Ryan Coogler – SINNERS Jafar Panahi – IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT Joachim Trier – SENTIMENTAL VALUE Chloe Zhao – HAMNET
BEST SCREENPLAY, ORIGINAL IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT – Jafar Panahi JAY KELLY – Noah Baumbach SENTIMENTAL VALUE – Joachim Trier SINNERS – Ryan Coogler SORRY, BABY – Eva Victor
BEST SCREENPLAY, ADAPTED BUGONIA – Will Tracy FRANKENSTEIN – Guillermo del Toro HAMNET – Maggie O’Farrell & Chloe Zhao ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER – Paul Thomas Anderson TRAIN DREAMS – Clint Bentley & Greg Kwedar
DOCUMENTARY COME SEE ME IN THE GOOD LIGHT – Ryan White MY MOM JAYNE – Mariska Hargitay ORWELL 2+2=5 – Raoul Peck THE LIBRARIANS – Kim A. Snyder THE PERFECT NEIGHBOR – Geeta Gandbhir
ANIMATED FEATURE ARCO – Ugo Bienvenu & Giles Cazaux IN YOUR DREAMS – Erik Benson & Alexander Woo KPOP DEMON HUNTERS – Chris Applehaus & Maggie Kang LITTLE AMELIE OR THE CHARACTER OF RAIN – Liane-Cho Jin Kuang & Mailys Vallade ZOOTOPIA 2 – Jared Bush & Simon Howard
BEST ACTRESS Jessie Buckley – HAMNET Rose Byrne – IF I HAD LEGS I’D KICK YOU Renate Reinsve – SENTIMENTAL VALUE Emma Stone – BUGONIA Tessa Thompson – HEDDA
BEST ACTRESS, SUPPORTING Nina Hoss – HEDDA Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – SENTIMENTAL VALUE Amy Madigan – WEAPONS Teyana Taylor – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Wunmi Mosaku – SINNERS
BEST ACTOR Leonardo DiCaprio – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Joel Edgerton – TRAIN DREAMS Ethan Hawke – BLUE MOON Michael B. Jordan – SINNERS Wagner Moura – THE SECRET AGENT
BEST ACTOR, SUPPORTING Benicio Del Toro – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Jacob Elordi – FRANKENSTEIN Paul Mescal – HAMNET Sean Penn – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Stellan Skarsgård – SENTIMENTAL VALUE
BEST ENSEMBLE CAST & CASTING DIRECTOR HAMNET – Nina Gold & Lucy Amos MARTY SUPREME – Jennifer Venditti NOUVELLE VAGUE – Stéphane Batut ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER – Cassandra Kulukundis SINNERS – Francine Maisler
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY FRANKENSTEIN – Dan Laustsen HAMNET – Łukasz Żal ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER – Michael Bauman SINNERS – Autumn Durald Arkapaw TRAIN DREAMS – Adolpho Veloso
BEST EDITING F1: THE MOVIE – Stephen Mirrione & Patrick J. Smith HAMNET – Affonso Gonçalves & Chloe Zhao MARTY SUPREME – Ronald Bronstein & Josh Safdie ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER – Andy Jurgensen SINNERS – Michael P. Shawver
BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT – Jafar Panahi NO OTHER CHOICE – Park Chan-wook SENTIMENTAL VALUE – Joachim Trier SIRÂT – Oliver Laxe THE SECRET AGENT – Kleber Mendonça Filho
FEMALE FOCUS AWARDS Presented Only to Women
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST FEMALE DIRECTOR Kathryn Bigelow – A HOUSE OF DYNAMITE Mary Bronstein – IF I HAD LEGS I’D KICK YOU Mona Fastvold – THE TESTAMENT OF ANN LEE Eva Victor – SORRY, BABY Chloe Zhao – HAMNET
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST FEMALE WRITER Mary Bronstein – IF I HAD LEGS I’D KICK YOU Nia DaCosta – HEDDA Hikari & Stephen Blahut – RENTAL FAMILY Eva Victor – SORRY, BABY Chloe Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell – HAMNET
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST VOICED PERFORMANCE IN ANIMATED FILM Ginnifer Goodwin – ZOOTOPIA 2 Loïse Charpentier – LITTLE AMELIE OR THE CHARACTER OF RAIN Arden Cho – KPOP DEMON HUNTERS Fortune Feimster – ZOOTOPIA 2 Zoë Saldaña – ELIO
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE Odessa A’Zion – MARTY SUPREME Chase Infiniti – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Teyana Taylor – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Wunmi Mosaku – SINNERS Eva Victor – SORRY, BABY
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST STUNTS PERFORMANCE Ana de Armas – BALLERINA Hayley Atwell – MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – THE FINAL RECKONING Chase Infiniti – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Teyana Taylor – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Pom Klementieff – MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – THE FINAL RECKONING
The North Texas Film Critics Association has announced its picks for the best of 2025! The winners are in bold!
BEST PICTURE Hamnet Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sentimental Value Sinners
BEST ACTOR Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another Dwayne Johnson – The Smashing Machine Michael Jordan – Sinners Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon
BEST ACTRESS Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Jessie Buckley – Hamnet Cynthia Erivo – Wicked: For Good Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value Emma Stone – Bugonia
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein Delroy Lindo – Sinners Paul Mescal – Hamnet Sean Penn – One Battle After Another Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value Benicio del Toro – One Battle After Another
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Elle Fanning – Sentimental Value Ariana Grande – Wicked: For Good Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Amy Madigan – Weapons Wunmi Mosaku – Sinners Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
BEST DIRECTOR Ryan Coogler – Sinners Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another Josh Safdie – Marty Supreme Joachim Trier – Sentimental Value Chloé Zhao – Hamnet
BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM It Was Just an Accident (France) No Other Choice (South Korea) Sentimental Value (Norway) Sirāt (Spain) The Secret Agent (Brazil)
BEST DOCUMENTARY 2000 Meters to Andriivka Deaf President Now Orwell: 2+2=5 The Alabama Solution The Perfect Neighbor
BEST ANIMATED FILM Arco KPop Demon Hunters Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Ne Zha 2 Zootopia 2
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Michael Bauman – One Battle After Another Autumn Durald Arkapaw – Sinners Dan Laustsen – Frankenstein Adolpho Veloso – Train Dreams Łukasz Żal – Hamnet
BEST NEWCOMER Miles Caton – Sinners Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Jacobi Jupe – Hamnet Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Alfie Williams – 28 Years Later
BEST SCREENPLAY Paul Thomas Anderson & Thomas Pynchon – One Battle After Another Ryan Coogler – Sinners Zach Cregger – Weapons Jafar Panahi – It Was Just an Accident Josh Safdie & Ronald Bronstein – Marty Supreme Will Tracy – Bugonia Chloé Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell – Hamnet
GARY MURRAY AWARD (BEST ENSEMBLE) Hamnet One Battle After Another Sinners Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery Weapons
The Georgia Film Critics Association has announced its picks for the best of 2025. The winners are listed in bold.
Best Picture Black Bag Hamnet It Was Just an Accident Marty Supreme One Battle After Another (WINNER) Sentimental Value Sinners (RUNNER-UP) Sorry, Baby Train Dreams Weapons
Best Director Hamnet – Chloé Zhao One Battle After Another – Paul Thomas Anderson (WINNER) Sentimental Value – Joachim Trier Sinners – Ryan Coogler (RUNNER-UP) Train Dreams – Clint Bentley
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 Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value (RUNNER-UP) Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby
Best Supporting Actor Benicio Del Toro – One Battle After Another (WINNER) Jacob Elordi – Frankenstein (RUNNER-UP) Sean Penn – One Battle After Another Adam Sandler – Jay Kelly Stellan Skarsgård – Sentimental Value
Best Supporting Actress Ariana Grande-Butera – Wicked: For Good Regina Hall – One Battle After Another (RUNNER-UP) Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Amy Madigan – Weapons (WINNER) Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
Best Original Screenplay If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Marty Supreme Sentimental Value (RUNNER-UP) Sinners (WINNERS) Sorry, Baby Weapons
Best Adapted Screenplay Frankenstein Hamnet No Other Choice One Battle After Another (WINNER) Train Dreams (RUNNER-UP)
Best Cinematography F1 Frankenstein One Battle After Another Sinners (WINNER) Train Dreams (RUNNER-UP)
Best Production Design The Fantastic Four: First Steps Frankenstein (WINNER) Hamnet Marty Supreme Sinners (RUNNER-UP)
Best Original Score F1 – Hans Zimmer Hamnet – Max Richter One Battle After Another – Jonny Greenwood Sinners – Ludwig Göransson (WINNER) Train Dreams – Bryce Dessner (RUNNER-UP)
Best Original Song “Golden” – KPop Demon Hunters (RUNNER-UP) “Highest 2 Lowest” – Highest 2 Lowest “I Lied to You” – Sinners (WINNER) “Last Time (I Seen the Sun)” – Sinners “Train Dreams” – Train Dreams
Best Ensemble Black Bag Marty Supreme One Battle After Another (WINNER) Sentimental Value Sinners (RUNNER-UP)
Breakthrough Award Miles Caton (WINNER) David Corenswet Chase Infiniti (RUNNER-U) Jacobi Jupe Eva Victor
Best Animated Film Arco (RUNNER-UP) Elio KPop Demon Hunters (WINNER) Scarlet Zootopia 2
Best Documentary The Alabama Solution (WINNER) The Librarians My Mom Jayne The Perfect Neighbor(RUNNER-UP) Predators
Best International Film It Was Just an Accident No Other Choice (RUNNER-UP) The Secret Agent Sentimental Value (WINNER) Sirāt
Oglethorpe Award for Excellence in Georgia Cinema Bugonia (RUNNER-UP) Meta Take One The Naked Gun Sister Salad Days (Short) Superman Swimming Holes (Short) Thunderbolts Weapons (WINNER) Withdrawl Zora Head: The Life and Scholarship of Valerie Boyd (Short)
“An idea, a feeling became clear to me. The hunter did not hate the wolf. The wolf did not hate the sheep. But violence felt inevitable between them. Perhaps, I thought, this was the way of the world. It would hunt you and kill you just for being who you are.” — the Creature
Guillermo del Toro’s long-awaited take on Frankenstein finally lumbers to life after years of speculation and teases, and it’s every bit the dark, hypnotic fever dream you’d expect from his imagination. The film, a Netflix-backed production running close to two and a half hours, stars Oscar Isaac as the guilt-ridden Victor Frankenstein and Jacob Elordi as his tragic creation. The result lands somewhere between Gothic melodrama and spiritual lament—a lush, melancholy epic about fathers, sons, and the price of neglect. It’s both a triumph of aesthetic world-building and a case study in overindulgence, the kind of movie that leaves you haunted even when it occasionally tests your patience.
From the very first frame, del Toro plunges us into a Europe steeped in rot and beauty. His world feels more haunted than alive—every misty street lamp and echoing corridor loaded with centuries of decay. Victor, introduced as both a visionary and a failed son, is shaped by years of cruelty at the hands of his domineering father, played with aristocratic venom by Charles Dance. That upbringing lingers in every decision he makes, especially when he turns to science to defy death. Del Toro shoots his laboratory scenes as though they were sacred rituals: the flicker of candlelight reflecting off glass jars, the close-up of trembling hands threading sinew into flesh. When the Creature awakens, lightning cracks like some divine act of punishment. It’s a birth scene that feels more emotional than monstrous—Elordi’s raw, wordless confusion gives it a painful tenderness that lingers longer than the horror. Del Toro discards the usual clichés of flat heads and neck bolts, opting for something far more human: an imperfect body full of scars and stitched reminders of mortality.
One of the most striking choices del Toro makes is reframing Victor and the Creature as mirror images rather than opposites. Instead of playing Victor as a simple mad scientist, del Toro paints him as a broken man desperate to reclaim the control he never had as a child. That fear and obsession ripple through the Creature, who becomes his unacknowledged shadow—an extension of Victor’s failure to love or take responsibility. The movie often frames the two in parallel shots, their movements synchronized across different spaces, suggesting that creator and creation are locked in a tragic loop. The audience watches both sides of the story—Victor’s guilt and the Creature’s anguish—without clear moral lines. This emotional split gives the film its heartbeat: the Creature isn’t a villain so much as a rejected child, articulate and lonely, begging to know why he was made to suffer.
Jacob Elordi’s performance is revelatory. He channels something hauntingly human beneath the layers of prosthetics and makeup. There’s a fragility to the way he moves—those long, uncertain gestures feel less like a monster testing its strength and more like someone trying to exist in a world that never wanted him. His eyes carry the movie’s emotional weight; the moment he sees his reflection for the first time is quietly devastating. Oscar Isaac, meanwhile, leans hard into Victor’s manic idealism, all sweat-soaked ambition and buried grief. He makes the character compelling even at his most despicable, though at times del Toro’s dialogue spells out Victor’s torment too bluntly. Still, the scenes between them—particularly their tense reunion in the frozen north—achieve the Shakespearean tragedy that del Toro clearly aims for.
Visually, Frankenstein is pure del Toro—sumptuous, grotesque, and alive in every corner of its composition. Each frame looks painted rather than filmed: flickers of gaslight reflecting on wet marble, glass jars filled with organs that seem to breathe, snow settling gently on slate rooftops. The film feels drenched in the texture of another century, yet vibrates with modern energy. Costume designer Kate Hawley, longtime collaborator of del Toro, deserves special recognition here. Her work helps define the story’s emotional tone, dressing Victor in meticulously tailored waistcoats that hint at obsession through precision, and the Creature in tattered fabrics that seem scavenged from several lives. Elizabeth’s gowns chart her erosion from warmth to mourning, using color and texture as silent narration. Hawley’s palette moves from opulent golds and creams to bleak greys and winter blues—visually tracing how ambition and grief drain the light from these characters’ worlds. The costumes, much like del Toro’s sets, feel alive with history, heavy with stories stitched into every seam.
Mia Goth gives a strong, if underused, turn as Elizabeth, Victor’s doomed fiancée. Her early scenes bring a spark of warmth to the story’s coldness; her later ones turn tragic in ways that push Victor toward his final breakdown. Minor characters—the townspeople, the academics, the curious aristocrats who toy with Victor’s discovery—carry familiar del Toro trademarks: grotesque faces, eccentric manners, glimmers of compassion buried in callousness. The composer’s score matches this tone perfectly, alternating between aching melodies on piano and surging orchestral crescendos that make even the quiet scenes feel mythic. Combined, the sound and visuals give Frankenstein a grandeur that most modern horror films wouldn’t dare attempt.
Still, not every gamble lands cleanly. Del Toro’s interpretation leans so hard into empathy that it dulls the edges of the original story’s moral conflict. Shelley’s Creature grows into a murderous intellect, acting out of vengeance as much as sorrow; here, his violence is softened or implied, as though del Toro can’t quite bring himself to stain the monster’s purity. The effect is powerful emotionally but flattens some of the tension—Victor becomes the clear villain, and the Creature, the clear victim. It fits del Toro’s worldview but leaves the viewer missing some ambiguity. The pacing also falters in the middle third. There are long, ornate monologues about divinity, creation, and guilt that blur together into a swirl of purple prose. The visuals never lose their grip, but the script occasionally does, especially when it slows down to explain what the imagery already tells us.
Those fits of overexplanation aside, del Toro’s Frankenstein stays deeply personal. The story connects directly to the themes he’s mined for years: innocence cursed by cruelty, love framed in pain, beauty stitched from the broken. The Creature isn’t just man made from corpses; he’s a kind of prayer for grace—a plea for understanding in a world defined by rejection. Victor’s failure to nurture becomes an act of spiritual cowardice rather than scientific arrogance. The parallels between them give the film its emotional voltage. Every time one character suffers, the other feels it by proxy, as if their bond transcends life and death.
By the final act, all the grand tragedy is distilled into the silence between two beings who can’t forgive each other—but can’t let go, either. The closing image of the Creature, trudging across a barren arctic plain beneath a rising sun, borders on mythic. His tear-streaked face and quiet acceptance of solitude bring the story full circle: a being born of man’s arrogance chooses forgiveness when his maker couldn’t. It’s sad, tender, and surprisingly spiritual, hinting at del Toro’s constant fascination with mercy in a cruel universe.
As a whole, Frankenstein feels like the culmination of del Toro’s career obsessions condensed into one sprawling film. It’s not perfect—it wanders, it sermonizes, and it sometimes sacrifices fear for sentiment—but it’s haunted by sincerity. You can see del Toro’s fingerprints in every gothic curve and crimson hue, and even when he overreaches, you believe in his conviction. Isaac anchors the film with burning intensity, Elordi gives it wounded humanity, and Goth tempers the heaviness with grace.
In the end, this version of Frankenstein isn’t about horror in the traditional sense. It’s not there to make you jump—it’s there to make you ache. The film trades sharp scares for bruised hearts, replacing terror with empathy. Del Toro reanimates not just flesh but feeling, dragging one of literature’s oldest monsters into our modern reckoning with parenthood, grief, and the burden of creation. It’s daring, messy, and undeniably alive. For better or worse, it’s exactly the Frankenstein Guillermo del Toro was always meant to make.
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
The Portland Critics Association has announced its nominations for the best of 2025. And here they are:
Best Picture Marty Supreme No Other Choice One Battle After Another Sinners Sorry, Baby Train Dreams
Best Director Paul Thomas Anderson, One Battle After Another Clint Bentley, Train Dreams Ryan Coogler, Sinners Jafar Panahi, It Was Just An Accident Park Chan-wook, No Other Choice Josh Safdie, Marty Supreme
Best Lead Performance Rose Byrne, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Jessie Buckley, Hamnet Timothée Chalamet, Marty Supreme Leonardo DiCaprio, One Battle After Another Joel Edgerton, Train Dreams Ethan Hawke, Blue Moon Michael B. Jordan, Sinners Josh O’Connor, The Mastermind Amanda Seyfried, The Testament of Ann Lee Emma Stone, Bugonia
Best Supporting Performance Mariam Afshari, It Was Just An Accident Benicio del Toro, One Battle After Another Jacob Elordi, Frankenstein Ralph Fiennes, 28 Years Later Delroy Lindo, Sinners Amy Madigan, Weapons Paul Mescal, Hamnet Wunmi Mosaku, Sinners Sean Penn, One Battle After Another Stellan Skarsgård, Sentimental Value
Best Ensemble Cast It Was Just An Accident Marty Supreme One Battle After Another Sinners Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery Weapons
Best Animated Feature I Am Frankelda K-Pop Demon Hunters Lost in Starlight Predator: Killer of Killers Stitch Head Zootopia 2
Best Documentary Feature Direct Action Megadoc Orwell: 2+2=5 Pavements The Perfect Neighbor Sly Lives!
Best Film Not in the English Language Caught by the Tides It Was Just An Accident No Other Choice The Secret Agent Sirāt Sentimental Value
Best Comedy Feature Bugonia Eephus Friendship The Naked Gun Sorry, Baby Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Best Horror Feature Frankenstein Good Boy The Plague Sinners 28 Years Later Weapons
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
The Greater Western New York Film Critics Association has announced its nominations for the best of 2025. And here they are:
BEST PICTURE The Ballad of Wallis Island Bugonia Frankenstein If I Had Legs I’d Kick You It Was Just an Accident Marty Supreme No Other Choice One Battle After Another Sinners Train Dreams
BEST FOREIGN FILM It Was Just an Accident (Iran/France) Misericordia (France) No Other Choice (South Korea) The Secret Agent (Brazil) Sentimental Value (Norway)
BEST ANIMATED FILM Arco Boys Go to Jupiter KPop Demon Hunters Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Zootopia 2
BEST DOCUMENTARY Afternoons of Solitude Cover-Up The Encampments The Perfect Neighbor The Tale of Silyan
BEST DIRECTOR Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another Mary Bronstein – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Ryan Coogler – Sinners Guillermo del Toro – Frankenstein Josh Safdie – Marty Supreme
LEAD ACTOR Timothée Chalamet – Marty Supreme Leonardo DiCaprio – One Battle After Another Ethan Hawke – Blue Moon Michael B. Jordan – Sinners Jesse Plemons – Bugonia
LEAD ACTRESS Jessie Buckley – Hamnet Rose Byrne – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Jennifer Lawrence – Die My Love Renate Reinsve – Sentimental Value Emma Stone – Bugonia
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
SUPPORTING ACTRESS Odessa A’zion – Marty Supreme Ariana Grande – Wicked: For Good Amy Madigan – Weapons Wunmi Mosaku – Sinners Teyana Taylor – One Battle After Another
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY If I Had Legs I’d Kick You (Mary Bronstein) It Was Just an Accident (Jafar Panahi) Marty Supreme (Josh Safdie & Ronald Bronstein) Sentimental Value (Eskil Vogt & Joachim Trier) Sinners (Ryan Coogler)
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Bugonia (Will Tracy) Frankenstein (Guillermo del Toro) Hamnet (Chloé Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell) No Other Choice (Park Chan-wook, Lee Kyoung-mi, Jahye Lee & Don McKellar) One Battle After Another (Paul Thomas Anderson)
BEST ENSEMBLE It Was Just an Accident
Marty Supreme
One Battle After Another
Sentimental Value
Sinners
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Frankenstein (Dan Laustsen) Marty Supreme (Darius Khondji) One Battle After Another (Michael Bauman) Sinners (Autumn Durald Arkapaw) Train Dreams (Adolpho Veloso)
BEST EDITING It Was Just an Accident (Amir Etminan) Marty Supreme (Ronald Bronstein & Josh Safdie) One Battle After Another (Andy Jurgensen) Sinners (Michael P. Shawver) Weapons (Joe Murphy)
BEST ORIGINAL SCORE Frankenstein (Alexandre Desplat) Marty Supreme (Daniel Lopatin) One Battle After Another (Jonny Greenwood) Sinners (Ludwig Göransson) Train Dreams (Bryce Dessner)
BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE Odessa A’zion – Marty Supreme Miles Caton – Sinners Chase Infiniti – One Battle After Another Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – Sentimental Value Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby
BREAKTHROUGH DIRECTOR Clint Bentley – Train Dreams Mary Bronstein – If I Had Legs I’d Kick You Harris Dickinson – Urchin Carson Lund – Eephus Eva Victor – Sorry, Baby
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
Here are the 2025 nominations of the Alliance of Women Film Journalists!
BEST FILM FRANKENSTEIN HAMNET IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER THE SECRET AGENT SENTIMENTAL VALUE SINNERS TRAIN DREAMS
BEST DIRECTOR Paul Thomas Anderson – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Ryan Coogler – SINNERS Jafar Panahi – IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT Joachim Trier – SENTIMENTAL VALUE Chloe Zhao – HAMNET
BEST SCREENPLAY, ORIGINAL IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT – Jafar Panahi JAY KELLY – Noah Baumbach SENTIMENTAL VALUE – Joachim Trier SINNERS – Ryan Coogler SORRY, BABY – Eva Victor
BEST SCREENPLAY, ADAPTED BUGONIA – Will Tracy FRANKENSTEIN – Guillermo del Toro HAMNET – Maggie O’Farrell & Chloe Zhao ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER – Paul Thomas Anderson TRAIN DREAMS – Clint Bentley & Greg Kwedar
DOCUMENTARY COME SEE ME IN THE GOOD LIGHT – Ryan White MY MOM JAYNE – Mariska Hargitay ORWELL 2+2=5 – Raoul Peck THE LIBRARIANS – Kim A. Snyder THE PERFECT NEIGHBOR – Geeta Gandbhir
ANIMATED FEATURE ARCO – Ugo Bienvenu & Giles Cazaux IN YOUR DREAMS – Erik Benson & Alexander Woo KPOP DEMON HUNTERS – Chris Applehaus & Maggie Kang LITTLE AMELIE OR THE CHARACTER OF RAIN – Liane-Cho Jin Kuang & Mailys Vallade ZOOTOPIA 2 – Jared Bush & Simon Howard
BEST ACTRESS Jessie Buckley – HAMNET Rose Byrne – IF I HAD LEGS I’D KICK YOU Renate Reinsve – SENTIMENTAL VALUE Emma Stone – BUGONIA Tessa Thompson – HEDDA
BEST ACTRESS, SUPPORTING Nina Hoss – HEDDA Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas – SENTIMENTAL VALUE Amy Madigan – WEAPONS Teyana Taylor – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Wunmi Mosaku – SINNERS
BEST ACTOR Leonardo DiCaprio – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Joel Edgerton – TRAIN DREAMS Ethan Hawke – BLUE MOON Michael B. Jordan – SINNERS Wagner Moura – THE SECRET AGENT
BEST ACTOR, SUPPORTING Benicio Del Toro – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Jacob Elordi – FRANKENSTEIN Paul Mescal – HAMNET Sean Penn – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Stellan Skarsgård – SENTIMENTAL VALUE
BEST ENSEMBLE CAST & CASTING DIRECTOR HAMNET – Nina Gold & Lucy Amos MARTY SUPREME – Jennifer Venditti NOUVELLE VAGUE – Stéphane Batut ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER – Cassandra Kulukundis SINNERS – Francine Maisler
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY FRANKENSTEIN – Dan Laustsen HAMNET – Łukasz Żal ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER – Michael Bauman SINNERS – Autumn Durald Arkapaw TRAIN DREAMS – Adolpho Veloso
BEST EDITING F1: THE MOVIE – Stephen Mirrione & Patrick J. Smith HAMNET – Affonso Gonçalves & Chloe Zhao MARTY SUPREME – Ronald Bronstein & Josh Safdie ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER – Andy Jurgensen SINNERS – Michael P. Shawver
BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE IT WAS JUST AN ACCIDENT – Jafar Panahi NO OTHER CHOICE – Park Chan-wook SENTIMENTAL VALUE – Joachim Trier SIRÂT – Oliver Laxe THE SECRET AGENT – Kleber Mendonça Filho
FEMALE FOCUS AWARDS Presented Only to Women
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST FEMALE DIRECTOR Kathryn Bigelow – A HOUSE OF DYNAMITE Mary Bronstein – IF I HAD LEGS I’D KICK YOU Mona Fastvold – THE TESTAMENT OF ANN LEE Eva Victor – SORRY, BABY Chloe Zhao – HAMNET
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST FEMALE WRITER Mary Bronstein – IF I HAD LEGS I’D KICK YOU Nia DaCosta – HEDDA Hikari & Stephen Blahut – RENTAL FAMILY Eva Victor – SORRY, BABY Chloe Zhao & Maggie O’Farrell – HAMNET
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST VOICED PERFORMANCE IN ANIMATED FILM Ginnifer Goodwin – ZOOTOPIA 2 Loïse Charpentier – LITTLE AMELIE OR THE CHARACTER OF RAIN Arden Cho – KPOP DEMON HUNTERS Fortune Feimster – ZOOTOPIA 2 Zoë Saldaña – ELIO
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE Odessa A’Zion – MARTY SUPREME Chase Infiniti – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Teyana Taylor – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Wunmi Mosaku – SINNERS Eva Victor – SORRY, BABY
FEMALE FOCUS: BEST STUNTS PERFORMANCE Ana de Armas – BALLERINA Hayley Atwell – MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – THE FINAL RECKONING Chase Infiniti – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Teyana Taylor – ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER Pom Klementieff – MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – THE FINAL RECKONING