The London Film Critics' Circle is the name by which the Film Section of The Critics' Circle is known internationally.
The word London was added because it was thought the term Critics' Circle Film Awards did not convey the full context of the awards' origins; the LFCC wished its annual Awards to be recognised on film advertising, especially in the United States, and in production notes.
The Critics' Circle, founded in 1913, is an association for working British critics. Film critics first became eligible for membership of the Circle in 1926. The Film section now has more than 180 members drawn from publications, broadcast media and the internet throughout the United Kingdom.
Film section members of the Critics' Circle will have worked as criticsâÂÂwriting informed analytical features or broadcasting programmes about film for British publications and mediaâÂÂfor at least two years, earning income from reviewing and writing about film.
Critics' Circle Film Awards
The Critics' Circle Film Awards were instituted in 1980 and are awarded annually by the Film Section of the Critics' Circle.
Voted for by all members of the Film Section, the awards have become a major event in London, presented at a dinner dance held in a large West End hotel. From 1995 to 2010 the awards ceremony was a charity event in aid of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC).
Award categories
Over the years, the Award categories have gradually changed with some categories being added and others dropped. For some categories this means that winners were not necessarily declared or listed in each of the Awards year.
In 2007, it was decided that Irish filmmakers, actors and others involved in the film industry would be eligible in what had previously been called "British" award categories. To that end, the titles of several of the awards were amended as "British/Irish".
Special awards include: The Attenborough Award, which goes to the British/Irish film of the year; The Philip French Award, which goes to the breakthrough British/Irish filmmaker of the year, and The Dilys Powell Award, which is awarded for excellence in cinema.
Past and present award categories include:
Awards ceremonies
1986âÂÂ1990 winners
1986 winners
William Hurt â Kiss of the Spider Woman
Bob Hoskins â Mona Lisa
Woody Allen â Hannah and Her Sisters
Akira Kurosawa â Ran
A Room with a View
1987 winners
Sean Connery â The Untouchables
Gary Oldman â Prick Up Your Ears
Alan Bennett â Prick Up Your Ears
Stanley Kubrick â Full Metal Jacket
Hope and Glory
1988 winners
Stephane Audran â Babette's Feast
Leo McKern â Travelling North
David Mamet â House of Games
John Huston â The Dead
House of Games
1989 winners
Daniel Day-Lewis â My Left Foot
Christopher Hampton â Dangerous Liaisons
Terence Davies â Distant Voices, Still Lives
Distant Voices, Still Lives
1990 winners
Philippe Noiret â Cinema Paradiso
Woody Allen â Crimes and Misdemeanors
Woody Allen â Crimes and Misdemeanors
Crimes and Misdemeanors
1991âÂÂ1996 winners
1991 winners
Gérard Depardieu â Cyrano de Bergerac
Susan Sarandon â Thelma & Louise, White Palace
- British Actor of the Year
Alan Rickman â Close My Eyes, Truly, Madly, Deeply, Quigley Down Under, '
- British Director of the Year
Alan Parker â The Commitments
- British Screenwriter of the Year
Dick Clement, Ian La Frenais, Roddy Doyle â The Commitments
Life Is Sweet
David Mamet â Homicide
Ridley Scott â Thelma & Louise
Thelma & Louise
1992 winners
Robert Downey Jr. â Chaplin
Judy Davis â Husbands and Wives, Barton Fink, Naked Lunch
- British Actor of the Year
Daniel Day-Lewis â The Last of the Mohicans
- British Director of the Year
Neil Jordan â The Crying Game
Howards End
- British Screenwriter of the Year
Neil Jordan â The Crying Game
Robert Altman â The Player
Unforgiven
Baz Luhrmann â Strictly Ballroom
Michael Tolkin â The Player
1993 winners
Anthony Hopkins â The Remains of the Day
Holly Hunter â The Piano
- British Actor of the Year
David Thewlis â Naked
- British Actress of the Year
Miranda Richardson â Fatale
- British Director of the Year
Ken Loach â Raining Stones
The Remains of the Day
- British Screenwriter of the Year
Roddy Doyle â The Snapper
- British Technical Achievement of the Year
Ken Adam â Addams Family Values
James Ivory â The Remains of the Day
The Piano
Quentin Tarantino â Reservoir Dogs
Harold Ramis, Danny Rubin â Groundhog Day
Kate Maberly â The Secret Garden
1994 winners
John Travolta â Pulp Fiction
Linda Fiorentino â The Last Seduction
- British Actor of the Year
Ralph Fiennes â Schindler's List
- British Actress of the Year
Crissy Rock â Ladybird, Ladybird
- British Director of the Year
Mike Newell â Four Weddings and a Funeral
Four Weddings and a Funeral
- British Producer of the Year
Duncan Kenworthy â Four Weddings and a Funeral
- British Screenwriter of the Year
Richard Curtis â Four Weddings and a Funeral
Steven Spielberg â Schindler's List
Schindler's List
Jim Carrey â The Mask, '
Quentin Tarantino â Pulp Fiction
Hugh Grant â Four Weddings and a Funeral
1995 winners
Johnny Depp â Ed Wood, Don Juan DeMarco
Nicole Kidman â To Die For
- British Actor of the Year
Nigel Hawthorne â The Madness of King George
- British Actress of the Year
Kate Winslet â Heavenly Creatures
- British Director of the Year
Michael Radford â '
The Madness of King George
- British Newcomer of the Year
Danny Boyle â Shallow Grave
- British Screenwriter of the Year
Alan Bennett â The Madness of King George
Peter Jackson â Heavenly Creatures
Babe
Paul Attanasio â Quiz Show, Disclosure
1996 winners
Morgan Freeman â Seven
Frances McDormand â Fargo
- British Actor of the Year
Ian McKellen â Richard III
Ewan McGregor â Trainspotting, Brassed Off, Emma, The Pillow Book
- British Actress of the Year
Brenda Blethyn â Secrets & Lies
- British Director of the Year
Mike Leigh â Secrets & Lies
- British Newcomer of the Year
Emily Watson â Breaking the Waves
- British Producer of the Year
Andrew Macdonald â Trainspotting
- British Screenwriter of the Year
Emma Thompson â Sense and Sensibility
Joel Coen â Fargo
Secrets & Lies
Joel Coen and Ethan Coen â Fargo
References
External links