Boyhood picked up three awards from the Toronto Film Critics Association last night – Best Film, Best Director – Richard Linklater, and Best Supporting Actress – Patricia Arquette.
Tom Hardy took Best Actor honors for Locke; Marion Cotillar was named Best actress for her work in The Immigrant, and J.K. Simmons got Best Supporting Actor for Whiplash.
Follow the jump for the complete list of winners.
• Best Film: Richard Linklater’s Boyhood, a cinematic masterpiece that evokes beauty in life and the inevitable passage of time
Runners-up: The Grand Budapest Hotel, Inherent Vice
• Best Director: Richard Linklater, for the singular achievement that is Boyhood
Runners-up: Paul Thomas Anderson, Inherent Vice; Wes Anderson, The Grand Budapest Hotel
• Best Actor: Tom Hardy, for playing a Welsh builder in crisis in Locke
Runners-up: Jake Gyllenhaal, Nightcrawler; Ralph Fiennes, The Grand Budapest Hotel
• Best Actress: Marion Cotillard, for her performance as a Polish woman navigating 1920s America in The Immigrant
Runners-up: Julianne Moore, Still Alice; Reese Witherspoon, Wild
• Best Supporting Actor: J.K. Simmons, for his role as a tyrannical conductor in Whiplash
Runners-up: Josh Brolin, Inherent Vice; Edward Norton, Birdman
• Best Supporting Actress: Patricia Arquette, for her role as the mother of Mason Jr. in Boyhood
Runners-up: Katherine Waterston, Inherent Vice; Tilda Swinton, Snowpiercer
• Best Screenplay: The Grand Budapest Hotel, for its nuanced humour and intricate narrative dollhouse
Runners-up: Boyhood (dir. Richard Linklater); Inherent Vice (dir. Paul Thomas Anderson)
• Best Animated Feature: Isao Takahata’s delicate fable The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
Runners-up: The Lego Movie; Big Hero 6; How to Train Your Dragon 2
• Best First Feature: Ritesh Batra’s The Lunchbox
Runners-up: Nightcrawler (dir. Dan Gilroy); John Wick (dir. David Leitch and Chad Stahelski)
• Best Foreign-Language Film: Ruben Östlund’s Force Majeure
Runners-up: Ida (dir. Pawel Pawlikowski); Leviathan (dir. Andrei Zvyagintsev)
• Best Documentary Film: Jesse Moss’s The Overnighters
Runners-up: Citizenfour (dir. Laura Poitras); Manakamana (dir. Stephanie Spray and Pacho Velez)
(Under the TFCA’s guidelines, contenders eligible for the awards include films released in Canada in 2014 plus films that qualify for the 2014 Oscars and have Canadian distribution scheduled by the end of February 2015.)