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Welcome to Kicking the Seat!

Ian Simmons launched Kicking the Seat in 2009, one week after seeing Nora Ephron’s Julie & Julia. His wife proposed blogging as a healthier outlet for his anger than red-faced, twenty-minute tirades (Ian is no longer allowed to drive home from the movies).

The Kicking the Seat Podcast followed three years later and, despite its “undiscovered gem” status, Ian thoroughly enjoys hosting film critic discussions, creating themed shows, and interviewing such luminaries as Gaspar NoéRachel BrosnahanAmy Seimetz, and Richard Dreyfuss.

Ian is a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association. He also has a family, a day job, and conflicted feelings about referring to himself in the third person.

CFCA Announce 2014 Award Nominees

From The Chicago Film Critics Association:

Although an especially nasty and vituperative critic was one of the many characters on display in the film "Birdman," the Chicago Film Critics Association apparently held no grudges, if the nominations for the group's 2014 film awards are any indication. The hallucinatory black comedy about a washed-up movie star desperately trying to restart his flagging career with a turn on Broadway led all comers with nine nominations, including Best Picture, nods for Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, Michael Keaton for Best Actor, Edward Norton for Best Supporting Actor, Emma Stone for Best Supporting Actress and additional nominations for Cinematography, Editing and Original Score.

In second place with eight nominations was "The Grand Budapest Hotel," Wes Anderson's whimsical comedy-drama about a concierge in a posh European hotel who becomes involved in intrigue while the world teeters on the brink of war. In addition to Best Picture and nominations for Anderson for Director and Original Screenplay, it was also cited for Art Direction/Set Production Design, Cinematography, Editing, Original Score and newcomer Tony Revolori landed in the Most Promising Performer category. Following up with seven nominations was "Boyhood," Richard Linklater's intimate epic charting the growth and maturation of a boy over the course of a 12-year shooting period. In addition to Best Picture and Director/Original Screenplay slots for Linklater, there were nominations for Ethan Hawke for Supporting Actor, Patricia Arquette for Supporting Actress, Ellar Coltrane, the boy at the center of it all, for Most Promising Performer and a nod for Best Editing.

The acclaimed indie drama "Whiplash," charting the battle of wills between a highly ambitious musical prodigy and his teacher, both obsessed with perfection at all costs, came up with five nominations, including Best Picture, Original Screenplay for writer-director Damien Chazelle, Supporting Actor for J.K. Simmons's terrifying turn as the teacher and Best Editing. In a surprise, the fifth Best Picture slot was filled by "Under the Skin," Jonathan Glazer's alternately creepy and erotic sci-fi drama about an alien in human form wandering through the streets of Scotland looking for. . . something--the film also earned Scarlett Johannson a Best Actress nod for her performance as the alien as well as slots in the Adapted Screenplay and Original Score categories. The year's other mind-bending sci-fi film, "Interstellar," earned Christopher Nolan a Best Director nomination and additional citations for Art Direction/Production Design, Cinematography and Original Score.

Among the other notable standouts in this year's crop of nominees, British actors Benedict Cumberbatch and Eddie Redmayne find themselves going head-to-head in the Best Actor category for playing troubled geniuses in, respectively, "The Imitation Game" and "The Theory of Everything," the controversial "Gone Girl" received nominations for David Fincher for Director, Rosamund Pike for Actress, author Gillian Flynn for Adapted Screenplay and Editing and the adaptation of Thomas Pynchon's screw-loose detective novel "Inherent Vice" earned nominations for celebrated filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson for Adapted Screenplay, Josh Brolin for Supporting Actor and Cinematography. Foreign titles were also represented in several key categories as well--beside being cited in the Foreign-Language Film category, "Ida" earned nods for Supporting Actress (Agata Kulesza), Promising Performer (Agata Trzebuchowska) and Cinematography while the wrenching Belgian drama "Two Days, One Night" earned Marion Cotillard a Best Actress nomination. "Life Itself," Steve James's celebration of the life and work of the late Roger Ebert, was nominated for Best Documentary alongside such equally acclaimed titles as "Citizenfour," "Jodorowsky's Dune," "Last Days in Vietnam" and "The Overnighters."

Now in its 25th year, the CFCA will announce its winners during our year-end awards dinner to be held on the evening of December 15, 2014. Follow @ChicagoCritics on Twitter for the real-time announcement. 

BEST PICTURE

Birdman

Boyhood

The Grand Budapest Hotel

Under the Skin

Whiplash

BEST DIRECTOR

Wes Anderson--The Grand Budapest Hotel

David Fincher--Gone Girl

Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu--Birdman

Richard Linklater--Boyhood

Christopher Nolan--Interstellar

BEST ACTOR

Benedict Cumberbatch--The Imitation Game

Jake Gyllenhaal--Nightcrawler

Michael Keaton--Birdman

David Oyelowo--Selma

Eddie Redmayne--The Theory of Everything

BEST ACTRESS

Marion Cotillard--Two Days, One Night

Scarlett Johannson--Under the Skin

Julianne Moore--Still Alice

Rosamund Pike--Gone Girl

Reese Witherspoon--Wild

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Josh Brolin--Inherent Vice

Ethan Hawke--Boyhood

Edward Norton--Birdman

Mark Ruffalo--Foxcatcher

J.K. Simmons--Whiplash

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS  

Patricia Arquette--Boyhood

Jessica Chastain--A Most Violent Year

Laura Dern--Wild

Agata Kulesza--Ida

Emma Stone--Birdman 

BEST ORIGNAL SCREENPLAY 

Birdman--Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Nicolas Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris and Armando Bo

Boyhood--Richard Linklater

Calvary--John Michael McDonagh

The Grand Budapest Hotel--Wes Anderson

Whiplash--Damien Chazelle

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

Gone Girl--Gillian Flynn

The Imitation Game--Graham Moore

Inherent Vice--Paul Thomas Anderson

Under the Skin--Walter Campbell

Wild--Nick Hornby

BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM

Force Majeure

Ida

Mommy

The Raid 2

Two Days, One Night

BEST DOCUMENTARY

Citizenfour

Jodorowsky's Dune

Last Days in Vietnam

Life Itself

The Overnighters

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE

Big Hero 6

The Boxtrolls

How to Train Your Dragon 2

The Lego Movie

Tales of the Princess Kaguya

BEST ART DIRECTION/PRODUCTION DESIGN

The Grand Budapest Hotel

Interstellar

Into The Woods

Only Lovers Left Alive

Snowpiercer

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Birdman--Emmanuel Lubezki

The Grand Budapest Hotel--Robert Yeoman

Ida--Ryszard Lenczewski and Lukasz Zal

Inherent Vice--Robert Elswit

Interstellar--Hoyte Van Hoytema 

BEST EDITING 

Birdman--Douglas Crise and Stephen Mirrion

Boyhood--Sandra Adair

Gone Girl--Kirk Baxter

The Grand Budapest Hotel--Barney Pilling

Whiplash--Tom Cross

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

Birdman--Antonio Sanchez

The Grand Budapest Hotel--Alexandre Desplat

The Imitation Game--Alexandre Desplat

Interstellar--Hans Zimmer

Under the Skin--Mica Levi

MOST PROMISING PERFORMER

Ellar Coltrane--Boyhood

Gugu Mbatha-Raw--Belle/Beyond the Lights

Jack O'Connell--Starred Up/Unbroken

Tony Revolori--The Grand Budapest Hotel

Jenny Slate--Obvious Child

Agata Trzebuchowska--Ida

MOST PROMISING FILMMAKER

Damien Chazelle--Whiplash

Dan Gilroy--Nightcrawler

Jennifer Kent--The Babadook

Jeremy Saulnier--Blue Ruin

Justin Simien--Dear White People

Nominations By The Numbers

9--Birdman

8--The Grand Budapest Hotel

7--Boyhood

5--Whiplash

4--Gone Girl, Ida, Interstellar, Under the Skin

3--The Imitation Game, Inherent Vice, Wild

2--Nightcrawler, Two Days, One Night

1--The Babadook, Belle, Beyond the Lights, Big Hero 6, Blue Ruin, The Boxtrolls, Calvary, Citizenfour, Dear White People, Force Majeure, Foxcatcher, How to Train Your Dragon 2, Into the Woods, Jodorowsky's Dune, Last Days in Vietnam, The Lego Movie, Life Itself, Mommy, A Most Violent Year, Obvious Child, Only Lovers Left Alive, The Overnighters, The Raid 2, Selma, Snowpiercer, Starred Up, Still Alice, Tale of the Princess Kaguya, The Theory of Everything, Unbroken

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