2024 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Ballot

Career Achievement
(3) Sammo Hung
(2) Víctor Erice
(1) Nathaniel Dorsky

The Douglas Edwards Experimental/Independent Film/Video Award
(3) The Human Surge 3
(2) It’s Not Me
(1) We Don’t Talk Like We Used To

Best Cinematography
(3) Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell
(2) Here
(1) Nickel Boys

Best Music/Score
(3) Evil Does Not Exist
(2) The Beast
(1) The Brutalist

Best Production Design
(3) Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In
(2) The Room Next Door
(1) Blitz

Best Editing
(3) Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World
(2) It’s Not Me
(1) Coma

Best Animation
(3) The Colors Within

Best Lead Performance
(5) Léa Seydoux, The Beast
(4) Ilinca Manolache, Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World
(3) Jason Schwartzman, Between the Temples
(2) Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Hard Truths
(1) Léa Drucker, Last Summer

Best Supporting Performance
(5) Adam Pearson, A Different Man
(4) Adria Arjona, Hit Man
(3) Matt Johnson, Matt and Mara
(2) Yura Borisov, Anora
(1) Sadie LaPointe, Eureka

Best Screenplay
(3) Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World
(2) A Traveler’s Needs
(1) The Shadowless Tower

Best Documentary/Non-Fiction Film
(3) Dahomey
(2) Pictures of Ghosts
(1) No Other Land

Best Director
(3) Bertrand Bonello, The Beast
(2) Ryusuke Hamaguchi, Evil Does Not Exist
(1) Angela Schanelec, Music

Best Picture
(3) The Beast
(2) Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World
(1) Evil Does Not Exist

Best Film Not in the English Language
(3) Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World
(2) Close Your Eyes
(1) All We Imagine as Light

New Generation
(3) Phạm Thiên Ân, Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell
(2) Bas Devos, Here
(1) Tyler Taormina, Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point

Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In

Soi Cheang’s cinema contains many things, but outright comedy isn’t generally one of them: aside from maybe a few choice scenes in SPL II: A Time for Consequences, his films operate under genre conventions that don’t usually allow for a great deal of humor to enter the proceedings. This is just one way in which Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In stands out in his oeuvre; a long-gestating project that has passed through the hands of numerous Hong Kong luminaries, it leans further than any of Cheang’s non-Monkey King films to date into crowd-pleasing conventionality, albeit so satisfying on its own terms that it scarcely seems to matter. Much of this comes from the coherence and loving treatment of the Kowloon Walled City, and how it seems to act as a reclamation of both past cinematic representations—most obviously the nightmarish ending of Long Arm of the Law, but maybe even the prologue of the re-edited Days of Being Wild—and of a space and industry lost in time. Similar to SPL II, the action is tighter and the sense of place is more deeply felt than the norm, with Hawksian dynamics leading the way, especially early on as our hero Lok (Raymond Lam) initially takes refuge by sleeping on corrugated metal eaves, sustained by the generosity of the city’s inhabitants as overseen by legendary martial artist Cyclone (Louis Koo). The film mixes in Koo and other luminaries—Sammo Hung, Richie Jen, Aaron Kwok—with Lam and other lesser-known cast members reasonably well, relying on Koo’s star power and the latter group’s likability (especially once Lok completes a quartet of younger martial artists) to establish this location as a melting pot of personalities and quiet camaraderie before the forces of the past come to tear things down.

Despite its confined, urban setting, Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In comes to feel like something of an epic, along the lines of Leone or even this year’s Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga, one of this year’s other worthy action extravaganzas, considering how much it is striving to embody something of the spirit of a particular time. Where Cheang comes in is the particularity and specificity of his images, and in the extremes to which his narrative pushes by the end. It’s ultimately apt that the closing credits play over a series of past images from the film, not of the dazzling fights, but of the quiet scenes of community building and daily living, a reminder of all the bloodshed and sacrifice needed to maintain such a city.

New York Film Festival 2024 Predictions (Round 3)

Main Slate
*Nickel Boys (RaMell Ross)
*The Room Next Door (Pedro Almodóvar)
*Blitz (Steve McQueen)
Afternoons of Solitude (Albert Serra)
All We Imagine as Light (Payal Kapadia)
Anora (Sean Baker)
April (Dea Kulumbegashvili)
Black Dog (Guan Hu)
By the River (Hong Sang-soo)
Caught by the Tides (Jia Zhangke)
Dahomey (Mati Diop)
The Damned (Roberto Minervini)
L’Empire (Bruno Dumont)
Grand Tour (Miguel Gomes)
Harvest (Athina Rachel Tsangari)
Misericordia (Alain Guiraudie)
Oh, Canada (Paul Schrader)
On Becoming a Guinea Fowl (Rungano Nyoni)
The Other Way Around (Jonás Trueba)
Pavements (Alex Ross Perry)
Pepe (Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias)
Serpent’s Path (Kurosawa Kiyoshi)
The Shrouds (David Cronenberg)
The Sparrow in the Chimney (Ramon Zürcher)
Stranger Eyes (Yeo Siew Hua)
Three Friends (Emmanuel Mouret)
A Traveler’s Needs (Hong Sang-soo)
Visiting Hours (Patricia Mazuy)
Youth (Hard Times) (Wang Bing)
Youth (Homecoming) (Wang Bing)

Currents
*Direct Action (Ben Russell & Guillaume Cailleau)
The Adamant Girl (PS Vinothraj)
Bluish (Lilith Kraxner & Milena Czernovsky)
Bogancloch (Ben Rivers)
The Cats of Gokogu Shrine (Soda Kazuhiro)
Familiar Touch (Sarah Friedland)
Fire of Wind (Marta Mateus)
Happyend (Sora Neo)
Invention (Courtney Stephens)
Lázaro de noche (Nicolás Pereda)
Monólogo Colectivo (Jessica Sarah Rinland)
Normandie (Vadim Kostrov)
Room of Shadows (Camilo Restrepo)
7 Walks With Mark Brown (Pierre Creton & Vincent Barré)
Sleep With Your Eyes Open (Nele Wohlatz)
Under a Blue Sun (Daniel Mann)
Viet and Nam (Trương Minh Quý)
You Burn Me (Matías Piñeiro)

Spotlight
*Queer (Luca Guadagnino)
Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point (Tyler Taormina)
Eephus (Carson Lund)
Eight Postcards From Utopia (Radu Jude & Christian Ferencz-Flatz)
The End (Joshua Oppenheimer)
exergue – on documenta 14 (Dimitris Athiridis)
Filmlovers! (Arnaud Desplechin)
The Invasion (Sergei Loznitsa)
It’s Not Me (Leos Carax)
No Other Land (Basel Adra & Hamdan Ballal & Yuval Abraham & Rachel Szor)
Rumours (Guy Maddin & Evan & Galen Johnson)
The Seed of the Sacred Fig (Mohammad Rasoulof)
Scénarios/Exposé du film annonce du film “Scénario” (Jean-Luc Godard)
Sleep #2 (Radu Jude)
Things We Said Today (Andrei Ujică)