Entertainment

2014 L.A. Film Critics Awards: Boyhood wins in 4 categories

The Los Angeles Film Critics Association named Richard Linklater's 12-year experiment Boyhood their best picture of 2014 on Sunday, with that film's Patricia Arquette and Tom Hardy from Locke selected as the year's top leading actors.

Birdman wins only for cinematography

Actress Patricia Arquette and Boyhood director Richard Linklater. (Mark Renders/Getty Images)

Boyhood is on a roll. The Los Angeles Film Critics Association named Richard Linklater's 12-year experiment their best picture of 2014 on Sunday.

Linklater also earned a best director honour for his film, while Patricia Arquette picked up best actress. Julianne Moore, who is largely considered an Oscar front runner for her portrayal of an Alzheimer's patient in Still Alice, was awarded runner-up in that category.

In the past week, Boyhood has become the consensus choice for critics groups. The Boston Society of Film Critics, the New York Film Critics Circle, and the New York Film Critics online have all picked chosen the film as the year's best. The only outlier is the National Board of Review, which gave that prize to A Most Violent Year.

The LA Film Critics Awards often overlap with eventual Oscar nominees, and sometimes winners, but are also known for some quirky choices. Just take best actor recipient Tom Hardy, whose nearly solo performance in the little-seen thriller Locke earned him critical raves, but is notably absent from any serious awards conversation.

Tom Hardy seen at at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 6, beat out the likes of Michael Keaton to earn the top actor nod from the L.A. Critics Association. (Fred Thornhill/Reuters)

J.K. Simmons, who is very much in the Oscar conversation, was awarded with best supporting actor for his portrayal of a sadistic jazz instructor in the indie Whiplash.

Beyond the four wins for Boyhood, including film editing, only two other films were multi-honourees: The Polish drama Ida which won best foreign language film and best supporting actress for Agata Kulesza, and Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel for screenplay and production design.

Aside from the cinematography award for Emmanuel Lubezki, Birdman, a favourite among critics, was only runner-up in a variety of categories, including best actor for Michael Keaton and best supporting actor for Edward Norton.

The Edward Snowden film Citizenfour picked up best documentary, with Steve James's ode to Roger Ebert, Life Itself, taking runner-up. Both films are on the shortlist for Oscar consideration.

Studio Ghibli's fantasy The Tale of Princess Kaguya won for best animation. The Lego Movie was the runner-up.

Touted films such as Wild, The Theory of Everything and The Imitation Game were shut out. The Martin Luther King, Jr. film Selma, narrowly missed that distinction, as director Ava DuVernay was given the New Generation award.

Gena Rowlands was previously announced as the career achievement award recipient.

Awards will be handed out at the 40th annual Los Angeles Film Critics Association ceremony on Jan. 10.