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2017 Cinema Eye nominees

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CINEMA EYE HONORS ANNOUNCES NOMINEES FOR 10th ANNUAL AWARDS

  • Feature Film Nominees | Cameraperson, Fire at Sea, I Am Not Your Negro, OJ: Made in America and Weiner
  •  I Am Not Your Negro and OJ: Made in America Lead With 5 nominations
  • Cameraperson and Fire at Sea receive 4 nominations
  • Weiner, The Eagle Huntress and Tickled get 3 nominations
  • Steve James returns to host 10th Annual Awards Ceremony at Museum of the Moving Image in January 2017

 

Thirty-seven feature films and five shorts will vie for the 2017 Cinema Eye Honors as nominees were announced tonight in Brooklyn at the newly-opened Alamo Drafthouse.  It's the 10th annual edition of the nonfiction film awards, which recognize outstanding artistry and craft in documentary during Cinema Eye Week, a multi-day celebration in nonfiction filmmaking that takes place in New York City each year in January.

 

Winners will be announced at the 2017 Honors Ceremony on January 11 at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens, which will be hosted for the second consecutive year by award-winning nonfiction filmmaker Steve James (The Interrupters, Life Itself,Hoop Dreams).

 

I Am Not Your Negro, Raoul Peck's portrait of writer & civil rights leader James Baldwin, and OJ: Made in America, Ezra Edelman's epic telling of race and the judicial system in Los Angeles, led all films with five nominations each, including Outstanding Nonfiction Feature, Direction and Editing.

 

Kirsten Johnson's Cameraperson and Gianfranco Rosi's Fire at Sea each received four nominations, including Feature, Direction and Cinematography.  Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg's Weiner rounded out the films nominated this year for Outstanding Nonfiction Feature.

 

Gianfranco Rosi led all individuals with 4 nominations for his work as Director, Producer and Cinematographer on Fire at Sea. Ezra Edelman, Kirsten Johnson, Raoul Peck and HBO's Sheila Nevins each received 3 nominations this year.

 

Ten films were nominated for the annual Audience Choice Prize, which often includes many of the year's most popular and talked about films, including Roger Ross WIlliams' Life, Animated, Clay Tweel's Gleason, Barbara Kopple's Miss Sharon Jones!, Tomer Heymann's Mr. Gaga, Ido Haar's Presenting Princess Shaw, David Farrier and Dylan Reeve's Tickled and Keith Maitland's Tower.  Kopple's nomination is noteworthy as she becomes the second filmmaker to be nominated for a Cinema Eye Honor after receiving the organization's Legacy Award for a previous film. Kopple was honored for Harlan County, U.S.A. in 2014; the late Albert Maysles was nominated earlier this year for Iris and In Transit after having been given the Legacy Award for Grey Gardens in 2011.

 

Elsewhere, Alex Gibney continued to make Cinema Eye history, receiving his 7th nomination, this year for his work as a Producer on Zero Days.  It's the 6th Gibney-directed film to receive a nomination from Cinema Eye, the most for any filmmaker.

 

Filmmaker Michal Marczak received his third lifetime nomination for his latest, All These Sleepless Nights, where he is up for Outstanding Cinematography. He was nominated for both of his previous films: At the Edge of Russia (Debut, 2012) and Fuck for Forest (Spotlight, 2014). With the nod, he joins Bill Ross and Turner Ross as filmmakers nominated for each of their first three features.  The Ross Brothers' latest film, Contemporary Color, also became their fourth film to be nominated. It is up this year for Cinematography and Original Score. They are the first filmmakers in Cinema Eye's ten-year history to have each of their first 4 films recognized with nominations. 

 

HBO's Sheila Nevins became the most nominated individual in Cinema Eye history, scoring her 9th, 10th and 11th nominations for HBO Documentary Films' Heroin: Cape Cod, USA, How to Dance in Ohio and Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures. Joining those films in the Outstanding Nonfiction for Television category are A&E's Happy Valley and Netflix' Making a Murderer and My Beautiful Broken Brain.

 

Other returning filmmakers include:

  • Robert Greene, whose nomination for Outstanding Direction for Kate Plays Christine is his second in the category (he was nominated for Actress in 2015).
  • Syd Garon's nomination for Outstanding Graphic Design and Animation for Author: The JT Leroy Story is his fourth nomination in the category in the past three years. He took home the trophy in 2015 for Jodorowsky's Dune.
  • Nels Bangerter, nominated for Outstanding Editing for Cameraperson, won the editing award in 2014 for Let the Fire Burn.
  •  Serge Lalou, who is nominated twice this year for Fire at Sea, won back in 2009 for producing Waltz With Bashir.
  • Michael Palmieri and Donal Mosher, who are nominated for Outstanding Short for Peace in the Valley, each won two Cinema Eye Honors in 2010 for October Country: Outstanding Debut and Outstanding Original Score.
  • Kirsten Johnson, who is up for three Honors this year for Cameraperson, was nominated in 2015 for the Cinematography award for Citizenfour.
  • Adam Del Deo is nominated in the Nonfiction for Television category for two Netflix films: Making a Murderer and My Beautiful Broken Brain. Del Deo was previously nominated in 2010 as one of the directors of Every Little Step.
  • Happy Valley director Amir Bar-Lev was previously nominated in 2011 for The Tillman Story.
  • Cameraperson producer Marilyn Ness was nominated in 2015 for Outstanding Production for The E-Team.
  • Happy Valley producer John Battsek was nominated earlier this year for Outstanding Feature for his work on Listen to Me Marlon.
  • HBO's Sara Bernstein scores her 6th and 7th nominations this year for Heroin: Cape Cod, USA and Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures. Nancy Abraham receives her 4th for How to Dance in Ohio.

Winners of the 10th Annual Cinema Eye Honors will be announced Wednesday, January 11, 2017 in New York at the Museum of the Moving Image.  The Honors Ceremony is the culmination of Cinema Eye Week, an international celebration of the year's best nonfiction artistry that includes screenings, parties and seminars.

 

The Museum of the Moving Image launches their 10-week screening series "Pushing the Envelope: A Decade of Documentary at the Cinema Eye Honors" this weekend.  The series will continue through the kickoff of Cinema Eye week in January. Full program included HERE .

 

HBO Documentary Films is the premier sponsor for Cinema Eye Week 2017. Major Sponsors are Netflix, A&E IndieFilms, Camden International Film Festival and Field of Vision. The Museum of the Moving Image is the Venue Partner for the 10th Annual Honors. The Murray Center for Documentary Journalism is the Institutional Partner.  Industry Sponsors include ESPN Films, Alamo Drafthouse, American Cinema Editors, CPH:DOX, LEF Foundation and Spacestation. 

 

More details about this year's event, including additional sponsors, this year's Heterodox nominees and this year's Legacy Award recipient, will be announced in the coming weeks.

 

A full list of nominees follows.

 

About Cinema Eye, Cinema Eye Week and the 2017 Cinema Eye Honors

 

Cinema Eye was founded in 2007 to recognize excellence in artistry and craft in nonfiction filmmaking.  It was the first and remains the only international nonfiction award to recognize the whole creative team, presenting annual craft awards in directing, producing, cinematography, editing, composing and graphic design/animation.  Cinema Eye presents and produces the annual Cinema Eye Week and Honors Ceremony. 

 

The Honors Ceremony is the centerpiece of Cinema Eye Week, a multi-day, multi-city celebration that acknowledges the best work in nonfiction film through screenings and events.  The final four days of Cinema Eye Week take place in New York City, where a series of celebratory events brought together many of the year's most accomplished filmmakers.  This year's dates are January 10-13, with awards presented at the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens on the 13th.

 

Nominees for the Cinema Eye Honors nonfiction feature awards are determined in voting by the top documentary programmers from throughout the world.  This year's nominations committee included Claire Aguilar (Sheffield), Pamela Cohn (Dokufest Kosovo), David Courier (Sundance), Cara Cusumano (Tribeca), Bruno Dequen (RIDM), Sarafina DiFelice (Hot Docs), Joanne Feinberg (formerly Programmer, Ashland), Elena Fortes (Morelia/Ambulante), Nominations Committee Chair Ben Fowlie (Camden), Tom Hall (Montclair), Sarah Harris (Dallas), Lane Kneedler (AFI Fest), Jim Kolmar (SXSW), Amir Labaki (It's All True), Artur Liebhart (Planete Doc Review), Mads Mikkelsen (CPH:DOX), David Nugent (Hamptons), Veton Nurkollari (Dokufest Kosovo), Janet Pierson (SXSW), Thom Powers (Toronto), Rachel Rosen (San Francisco), Shane Smith (Hot Docs), Martijn te Pas (IDFA), Sadie Tillery (Full Frame), Basil Tsiokos (DOC NYC) and David Wilson (True/False).

 

Nominees for the Cinema Eye Honors short film awards were selected by a nominations committee that included Claire Aguilar (Sheffield Doc/Fest), Chris Boeckman (True/False), Cara Cusumano(Tribeca), Ben Fowlie (Camden International Film Festival), Claudette Godfrey (SXSW), Jasper Hokken (IDFA), Doug Jones (Images Cinema), Maggie Mackay (Aspen Shorts) Ted Mott (Full Frame), Veton Nurkollari (DokuFest Kosovo), Dan Nuxoll (Rooftop Films), Mike Plante (Sundance), Shorts Chair Rachel Rosen (San Francisco), Shane Smith (Hot Docs) and Kim Yutani (Sundance). 

 

Nominees for the Television Award were selected in a two rounds of voting.  The first round consisted of programmers that included Joanne Feinberg (formerly of Ashland), Tom Hall (Montclair), Sarah Harris (Dallas), Doug Jones (Images Cinema), Lane Kneedler (AFI FEST), Jim Kolmar (SXSW), Andrea Passafiume (formerly of AFI Docs), Andrew Rodgers (Denver( Sadie Tillery (Full Frame)..  The second round included film critics and writers Paula Bernstein, Steve Dollar, Bilge Ebiri, Eric Hynes, Liz Shannon Miller, Mark Olsen, Jeff Reichert and Farihah Zaman.

 

Charlotte Cook and Marshall Curry serve as Cinema Eye's Board Chairs. Wendy Garrett and Nathan Truesdell will serve as Co-Chairs of Cinema Eye Week. Will Lennon is Cinema Eye's Managing Director.  AJ Schnack is the Founding Director of Cinema Eye.

 

 

Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking

 

Cameraperson

Directed by Kirsten Johnson | Produced by Kirsten Johnson and Marilyn Ness

 

Fire at Sea

Directed by Gianfranco Rosi | Produced by Donatello Palermo, Gianfranco Rosi, Serge Lalou and Camille Laemlé

 

I Am Not Your Negro

Directed by Raoul Peck| Produced by Rémi Grellety, Raoul Peck and Hébert Peck

 

OJ: Made in America

Directed by Ezra Edelman | Produced by Ezra Edelman and Caroline Waterlow

 

Weiner

Directed and Produced by Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg

 

Outstanding Achievement in Direction

 

Kirsten Johnson | Cameraperson

Gianfranco Rosi | Fire at Sea

Raoul Peck | I Am Not Your Negro

Robert Greene | Kate Plays Christine

Ezra Edelman | OJ: Made in America

 

Outstanding Achievement in Editing

 

Nels Bangerter | Cameraperson

Clay Tweel | Gleason

Alexandra Strauss | I Am Not Your Negro

Bret Granato, Maya Mumma and Ben Sozanski | OJ: Made in America

Eli Despres | Weiner

 

Outstanding Achievement in Production

 

Stacey Reiss, Sharon Chang and Otto Bell | The Eagle Huntress

Donatello Palermo, Gianfranco Rosi, Serge Lalou and Camille Laemmlé | Fire at Sea

Ezra Edelman and Caroline Waterlow | OJ: Made in America

Carthew Neal | Tickled

Marc Shmuger and Alex Gibney | Zero Days

 

Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography

 

Michal Marczak and Maciej Twardowski | All These Sleepless Nights

Kirsten Johnson | Cameraperson

Jarred Alterman | Contemporary Color

Simon Niblett | The Eagle Huntress

Gianfranco Rosi | Fire at Sea

 

Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Films Made for Television

 

Happy Valley

Directed by Amir Bar-Lev | Produced by Jonathan Koch, Steve Michaels, John Battsek and Ken Dornstein

For A&E IndieFilms: Molly Thompson, Robert DeBitetto and David McKillop

 

Heroin: Cape Cod, USA

Directed and Produced by Steven Okazaki

For HBO Documentary Films: Sara Bernstein and Sheila Nevins

 

How to Dance in Ohio

Directed by Alexandra Shiva | Produced by Alexandra Shiva and Bari Pulman

For HBO Documentary Films: Nancy Abraham and Sheila Nevins

 

Making a Murderer

Directed and Produced by Laura Ricciardi and Moira Demos

For Netflix: Lisa Nishimura and Adam Del Deo

 

Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures

Directed by Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato | Produced by Katharina Otto-Bernstein and Mona Card

For HBO Documentary Films: Sara Bernstein and Sheila Nevins

 

My Beautiful Broken Brain

Directed by Sophie Robinson and Lotje Sodderlan | Produced by Sophie Robinson

For Netflix: Lisa Nishimura and Adam Del Deo

 

Audience Choice Prize

 

Gleason | Directed by Clay Tweel

I Am Not Your Negro | Directed by Raoul Peck

Life, Animated | Directed by Roger Ross Williams

Miss Sharon Jones! | Directed by Barbara Kopple

Mr. Gaga | Directed by Tomer Heymann

Presenting Princess Shaw | Directed by Ido Haar

Sonita | Directed by Rokhsareh Ghaem Maghami

Tickled | Directed by David Farrier and Dylan Reeve

Tower | Directed by Keith Maitland

Weiner | Directed by Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg

 

Outstanding Achievement in a Debut Feature Film

 

Craig Atkinson | Do Not Resist

Otto Bell | The Eagle Huntress

Jessica Edwards | Mavis!

Nanfu Wang | Hooligan Sparrow

David Farrier and Dylan Reeve | Tickled

Heidi Brandenburg and Mathew Orzel | When Two Worlds Collide

 

Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Score

 

Lubomir Grzelak | All These Sleepless Nights

Nominees to be Determined | Contemporary Color

Alexei Aigui | I Am Not Your Negro

Alex Lu | In the Pursuit of Silence

Gary Lionelli | OJ: Made in America

 

Outstanding Achievement in Graphic Design or Animation

 

Chris Kirk and Syd Garon | Author: The JT Leroy Story

Philippe Sonrier and Suzie Cimato | Life, Animated

Nominees to be Determined | Nuts!

Craig Staggs and Keith Maitland | Tower

Nominees to be Determined | Zero Days

 

Spotlight Award

 

All this Panic | Directed by Jenny Gage

Among the Believers | Directed by Hemal Trivedi and Mohammed Ali Naqvi

Dead Slow Ahead | Directed by Mauro Herce

The Land of the Enlightened | Directed by Pieter-Jan De Pue

The Pearl | Directed by Jessica Dimmock and Christopher LaMarca

Les Sauteurs (Those Who Jump) | Directed by Estephan Wagner and Moritz Siebert

 

Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Short Filmmaking

 

Bacon and God's Wrath | Directed by Sol Friedman

Extremis | Directed by Dan Krauss

La Laguna | Directed by Aaron Schock

My Aleppo | Directed by Melissa Langer

Peace in the Valley | Directed by Michael Palmieri and Donal Mosher

 

The Unforgettables

The year's most notable and significant nonfiction film subjects (previously announced)

 

Michal Huszcza | All These Sleepless Nights

Audrie Pott and Daisy Coleman | Audrie and Daisy

Laura Albert | Author: The JT Leroy Story

Kirsten Johnson | Cameraperson

Aisholpan Nurgaiv | The Eagle Huntress

Samuela Pucillo | Fire at Sea

Steve Gleason and Michel Varisco | Gleason

Ye Haiyan | Hooligan Sparrow

Kate Shiel | Kate Plays Christine

Owen Suskind | Life, Animated

Sharon Jones | Miss Sharon Jones!

Peter Dunning | Peter and the Farm

Princess Shaw | Presenting Princess Shaw

Sonita Alidazeh | Sonita

Huma Abedin and Anthony Weiner | Weiner

 

Nominations By Film Totals

 

5

I Am Not Your Negro

OJ: Made in America

 

4

Cameraperson

Fire at Sea

 

3

The Eagle Huntress

Tickled

Weiner

 

2

All These Sleepless Nights

Contemporary Color

Gleason

Life, Animated

Tower

Zero Days

 

 

1

All This Panic

Among the Believers

Author: The JT Leroy Story

Dead Slow Ahead

Do Not Resist

Kate Plays Christine

The Land of the Enlightened

Happy Valley

Heroin: Cape Cod, USA

Hooligan Sparrow

How to Dance in Ohio

In Pursuit of Silence

Making a Murderer

Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures

Mavis!

Miss Sharon Jones!

Mr. Gaga

My Beautiful Broken Brain

Nuts!

The Pearl

Presenting Princess Shaw

Les Sauteurs (Those Who Jump)

Sonita

When Two Worlds Collide

 

Short Film

Bacon and God's Wrath

Extremis

La Laguna

My Aleppo

Peace in the Valley

 

 

Most Individual Nominations This Year (for one film or *multiple films)

Gianfranco Rosi - 4

Ezra Edelman - 3

Kirsten Johnson - 3

Sheila Nevins - 3*

Raoul Peck - 3

Otto Bell - 2

Sara Bernstein - 2*

Adam Del Deo - 2*

David Farrier - 2

Josh Kriegman - 2

Camille Laemmle - 2

Serge Lalou - 2

Lisa Nishimura - 2*

Donatello Palermo - 2

Dylan Reeve - 2

Elyse Steinberg - 2

Clay Tweel - 2

Caroline Waterlow - 2

 


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