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2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners

From jazz-infused dramas to superhero send-ups, here are our picks for the best films and performances of 2014

  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, The Theory of Everything
    Liam Daniel/Universal Pictures International

    Best Movie for Grownups

    The Theory of Everything The true story of astrophysicist Stephen Hawking (Eddie Redmayne) and his first wife, Jane (Felicity Jones), starts out as a tale of young love. But as Stephen falls ill, the film supernovas into matters both painfully personal and mind-blowingly cosmic.  

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Richard Linklater
    Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman/Associated Press

    Best Director

    Richard Linklater, Boyhood Richard Linklater admits it was “insane” to start a movie about a 6-year-old and continue filming it with the same actor (Ellar Coltrane) through age 18. Maybe, but it's fun watching the boy get older while his parents enact growing up too.

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  • Steve Carrell and Channing Tatum Star in Foxcatcher.
    Sony Pictures

    Best Actor

    Steve Carell, Foxcatcher In Foxcatcher, the Steve Carell (left) we’ve known for his hilarious turns becomes the dead-eyed John E. du Pont, a wannabe wrestling coach whose delusions, combined with his vast wealth, spelled disaster for all around him.

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Julianne Moore
    Courtesy Sony Pictures Classics

    Best Actress

    Julianne Moore, Still Alice As a 50-year-old professor enduring early-onset Alzheimer’s, Julianne Moore conveys the experience of losing her identity. Never settling for cheap sentiment, Moore allows Alice to rage against the dying of the light.    

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Whiplash
    Daniel McFadden/Sony Pictures Classics

    Best Supporting Actor

    J. K. Simmons, Whiplash This journeyman actor, best known for countless TV commercials, springs upon film audiences with a fierce, disorienting turn as an über-demanding music teacher whose insistence on perfection is merely a bellows to stoke his brutal nature.    

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  • Jake Gyllenhaal and Rene Russo Star in Nightcrawler.
    Courtesy Open Road Films

    Best Supporting Actress

    Rene Russo, Nightcrawler On the surface, Jake Gyllenhaal is the crazy one as the lensman who loves filming grisly accident scenes. But Rene Russo is even scarier as the TV news producer who enables him because she never questions how he gets that gory footage.

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Cheryl Strayed, Reese Witherspoon, Nick Hornby
    Joel Ryan/Associated Press

    Best Screenwriter

    Nick Hornby and Cheryl Strayed, Wild Cheryl Strayed (left) provided the tale of her 1,100-mile solo hike; Nick Hornby (right) shaped her fiercely personal memoir into a wilderness adventure with Reese Witherspoon (center) portraying the angst-ridden heroine.

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Chef
    Courtesy Open Road Films

    Best Comedy

    Chef Jon Favreau (left) plays a master chef who reinvents himself as a food-truck sensation. The writer-director-star surrounds himself with colorful characters who share his passion for authentic cuisine. Do not watch on an empty stomach.

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  • A middle aged african-american couple lean against each other and smile with text that reads keep life fun and your calendar full.

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, My Old Lady
    Courtesy Cohen Media Group

    Breakthrough Achievement

    Israel Horovitz, Director, My Old Lady After writing a handful of acclaimed screenplays Israel Horovitz directs his first film, at age 75. A less-confident rookie might have balked at taking on Maggie Smith and Kevin Kline (pictured), but Horovitz elicits strong performances from both.  

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Big Eyes
    Weinstein Company/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Best Time Capsule

    Big Eyes The saucer-eyed waifs who populated the paintings of Margaret Keane helped define early- 1960s American culture; no wonder Tim Burton’s version of her story is up to its peepers in period atmosphere with wide ties and capri pants.

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Love is Strange
    Courtesy Sony Pictures Classics

    Best Grownup Love Story

    Love Is Strange
    The married couple at the center of Love Is Strange happens to be two men (John Lithgow and Alfred Molina). But the crises they face could be the lot of any aging pair.   

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, St. Vincent
    Courtesy The Weinstein Company

    Best Intergenerational Film

    St. Vincent Grumpy loner (Bill Murray) reluctantly babysits the adorable little boy next door (Jaeden Lieberher). The two bring uncommon warmth to the relationship as their characters accommodate each other’s quirks to fill their own personal voids.

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Diplomacy
    Courtesy Zeitgeist Films

    Best Foreign Film

    Diplomacy (Germany/France) Paris stands as a tribute to the backroom victory won by Swedish diplomat Raoul Nordling (André Dussollier, right) when he persuaded German general Dietrich von Choltitz (Niels Arestrup, left) to ignore Hitler’s orders to raze the city.   

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Keep On Keepin' On, Clark Terry
    Courtesy Radius

    Best Documentary

    Keep On Keepin’ On Trumpeter Clark Terry was the first music teacher of jazz legend Quincy Jones. Here Terry mentors Justin Kauflin, a 23-year-old blind piano prodigy. Their friendship makes this a timeless document of generational torch-passing.  

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, Land Ho!
    Courtesy Radius

    Best Buddy Picture

    Land Ho! One is waiting to die; the other can’t wait for tomorrow. Against Iceland’s barren and beautiful volcanic landscapes, two longtime friends Earl Lynn Nelson (left) and Paul Eenhoorn (right) discover new life beneath their crusty selves.

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  • 2015 Movies for Grownups Award Winners, The Lego Movie
    Warner Bros/The Kobal Collection

    Best Movie for Grownups Who Refuse to Grow Up

    The Lego Movie This animated film builds upon the collective boomer experience of playing with Legos back when bricks were all there was. Chris Pratt stars as a plain Lego figure tasked with saving the entire click-brick world. The rest is pure, manic magic.  

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