Entertainment

National Board of Review names Green Book year's best film

The feel-good road-trip drama Green Book was named the best film of the year, and its star, Viggo Mortensen, best actor, by the National Board of Review in one of the first in a parade of awards season honours.

A Star Is Born remake wins multiple categories, including best actress for Lady Gaga

Viggo Mortensen, left, and Mahershala Ali appear in a scene from Peter Farrelly's film Green Book. (TIFF)

The feel-good road-trip drama Green Book was named the best film of the year, and its star, Viggo Mortensen, best actor, by the National Board of Review in one of the first in a parade of awards season honours.

The NBR awards, announced Tuesday, gave the Oscar hopes of Universal's Green Book a jolt. The film, directed by Peter Farrelly (who typically makes broader comedies like There's Something About Mary with his brother, Bobby) was declared an Oscar favourite after taking the audience award at the Toronto International Film Festival.

But in two weeks of release, it has struggled to latch on at the box office, and some critics have called its portrayal of race relations old-fashioned and criticized it for relying on "white saviour" tropes.

It stars Mahershala Ali as classical pianist Don Shirley, who tours the Deep South in 1962 with a racist Italian-American driver played by Mortensen.

Bradley Cooper's lauded remake A Star Is Born also took several top awards, including best director for Cooper, best actress for Lady Gaga and best supporting actor for Sam Elliott.

Barry Jenkins' James Baldwin adaptation If Beale Street Could Talk took prizes for Jenkins' screenplay and for Regina King's supporting performance.

Though sometimes called an Oscar harbinger, the National Board of Review, a 109-year-old organization of film enthusiasts, academics and professionals, has typically deviated from eventual best picture winners. It last year chose Steven Spielberg's The Post. Before that, its top winners were Manchester By the SeaMad Max: Fury Road and A Most Violent Year.

On Monday night, the Gotham Awards, which honour independent film, selected Chloe Zhao's The Rider as its best feature film of the year. Critics groups will soon start weighing in with their picks, starting with the New York Film Critics Circle on Thursday.

Other prizes from the National Board of Review included best ensemble for the cast of the romantic-comedy hit Crazy Rich Asians; best documentary to the popular Ruth Bader Ginsberg chronicle RBG; best screenplay to Paul Schrader's First Reformed; best animated feature to Incredibles 2; best foreign-language film to Cold War.

The awards will be handed out in on January 8 in New York at a gala hosted by Willie Geist.