‘Beginners,’ ‘Tree of Life’ win Gotham Film Awards

NEW YORK,  (Reuters) – Terrence Malick’s “The Tree of  Life” and the Christopher Plummer film “Beginners” shared the  top prize for best feature film on Monday at the Gotham Awards,  a key event for independent movies which also marks the start  of the film-awards season culminating in the Oscars.

The honours for “The Tree of Life,” a mystical period drama  starring Brad Pitt, and “Beginners,” which stars Ewan McGregor  as a man whose elderly father (Plummer) comes out of the  closet, scored upset victories.

Alexander Payne’s “The Descendants,” a well-reviewed Oscar  front-runner which stars George Clooney in a family drama set  in Hawaii, was nominated in three categories but won none.

Instead “Beginners,” directed by relative neophyte Mike  Mills, also won best ensemble performance at the New York-based  awards, co-hosted by Edie Falco and Oliver Platt.

Mills lauded his cast, singling out Plummer by saying there  was “no good reason for Christopher Plummer to believe in me.  But he did.”

The best documentary honour went to “Better This World,”  about two boyhood friends from Texas accused of attempting to  bomb the 2008 Republican convention.

The Gotham Awards are held annually by the Independent  Feature Project, a nonprofit organization founded in 1979 that  supports independent filmmaking. The awards provide a focus on  the year’s top independent movies heading into award season.

Felicity Jones took the prize for breakthrough actor for  her work in “Like Crazy,” playing a British student separated  from her American boyfriend after her visa expires.

Dee Rees won the breakthrough director award for her debut  non-documentary feature, “Pariah,” about a New York City  African-American teenager confronting her sexual identity.

“Girlfriend” won the audience award, while “Scenes of a  Crime,” the story of a man appealing a life prison sentence,  was named best film without a distribution deal.

Special tribute awards were given to Charlize Theron, Gary  Oldman, “A Dangerous Method” director David Cronenberg and Fox  Filmed Entertainment CEO Tom Rothman.