The 45th National Society of Film Critics Awards, given on 8 January 2011, honored the best in film for 2010. [1] [2] [3]
Winners are listed in boldface along with the runner-up positions and counts from the final round:
1.
The Social Network (61)
2.
Carlos (28)
3.
Winter's Bone (18)
1.
David Fincher –
The Social Network (66)
2.
Olivier Assayas –
Carlos (36)
3.
Roman Polanski –
The Ghost Writer (29)
1.
Jesse Eisenberg –
The Social Network (30)
2.
Colin Firth –
The King's Speech (29)
2.
Édgar Ramírez –
Carlos (29)
1.
Giovanna Mezzogiorno –
Vincere (33)
2.
Annette Bening –
The Kids Are All Right (28)
3.
Lesley Manville –
Another Year (27)
1.
Geoffrey Rush –
The King's Speech (33)
2.
Christian Bale –
The Fighter (32)
3.
Jeremy Renner –
The Town (30)
1.
Olivia Williams –
The Ghost Writer (37)
2.
Amy Adams –
The Fighter (28)
3.
Melissa Leo –
The Fighter (23)
3.
Jacki Weaver –
Animal Kingdom (23)
1.
Aaron Sorkin –
The Social Network (73)
2.
David Seidler –
The King's Speech (25)
3.
Roman Polanski and
Robert Harris –
The Ghost Writer (19)
1.
Roger Deakins –
True Grit (31)
2.
Matthew Libatique –
Black Swan (27)
3.
Harris Savides –
Somewhere (18)
1.
Carlos (31)
2.
A Prophet (22)
3.
White Material (16)
1.
Charles Ferguson –
Inside Job (25)
2.
Banksy –
Exit Through the Gift Shop (21)
3.
Lixin Fan –
Last Train Home (Guītú Lièchē) (15)
1.
Flicker Alley for
Chaplin at Keystone
2.
Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment for
The Elia Kazan Collection
3.
The Film Foundation (for twenty years of providing financial support and moral leadership for the
preservation and restoration of motion pictures from around the world)
4.
Upstream, a rediscovered 1927 backstage comedy film directed by
John Ford (discovered in the collection of the
New Zealand Film Archive and repatriated under the auspices of the
National Film Preservation Foundation with the collaboration of the
Academy Film Archive,
Park Road Post Production, and
Twentieth Century Fox)
5.
On the Bowery (restored by Davide Pozzi of the
Cineteca del Comune di Bologna in cooperation with the
Rogosin Heritage and
Anthology Film Archives, and distributed in the U.S. by
Milestone Films)
6.
Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives (restored by
Ross Lipman for the
UCLA Film & Television Archive and the
Outfest Legacy Project, and distributed by
Milestone Films)