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Seattle Film Critics Society: 2025 Awards Nominations

Seattle, WA – The Seattle Film Critics Society (SFCS) has announced nominations for the 2025 SFCS Awards, honoring the year’s best in film. Ryan Coogler’s Sinners ties the all-time record for most nominations in a single year with 14, matching 2022’s Everything Everywhere All At Once. Close behind with 12 nominations is Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another, with Pacific Northwest film Train Dreams, directed by Clint Bentley, following with eight nominations. 

This year’s 10 nominees for Best Picture include: 

Bugonia, Yorgos Lanthimos’s reimagining of the 2003 South Korean film Save the Green Planet! follows two cousins who kidnap a CEO, believing she is an alien from outer space. Along with its Best Picture nomination, Emma Stone is recognized as a nominee for Lead Actress. 

HamnetChloé Zhao’s bittersweet drama exploring the events that inspired William Shakespeare’s Hamlet earned five nominations: Best Picture, Director, Cinematography, Youth Performance (Jacobi Jupe), and Lead Actress (Jessie Buckley). 

It Was Just an AccidentJafar Panahi’s latest film, shot in secret, depicts former political prisoners struggling with the decision of whether to enact revenge on their former abuser. In addition to Best Picture, it earned a nomination for Best International Film. 

Marty Supreme,Josh Safdie’s hyperkinetic story of table tennis champion Marty Mauser earned nominations for Best Picture, Director, Ensemble Cast, Screenplay, Film Editing, and Lead Actor (Timothée Chalamet).

One Battle After AnotherPaul Thomas Anderson’s topical comedic thriller about a single father desperately trying to protect his teenage daughter from a former enemy earned 12 nominations, including Best Picture, Director, Ensemble Cast, Screenplay, Cinematography, Editing, and Original Score. Notable acting nods include Lead Actor (Leonardo DiCaprio), Supporting Actor (Benicio del Toro), Supporting Actress (Teyana Taylor), and Sean Penn, who earned both a Supporting Actor and Villain of the Year nomination for his portrayal of Col. Steven J. Lockjaw. 

Sentimental ValueJoachim Trier’s Norwegian drama about an estranged father reconnecting with his adult daughters through his art, earned nominations for Best Picture, International Film, and Supporting Actress (Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas).

Sinners, Ryan Coogler’s multi-layered gothic horror film set in the Mississippi Delta in the 1930s, earned nominations for Best Picture, Director, Ensemble Cast, Screenplay, Cinematography, Costume Design, Film Editing, Original Score, Production Design, Action Choreography, and Visual Effects. Michael B. Jordan earned a nomination for Lead Actor, Wunmi Mosaku is a nominee for Best Supporting Actress, and Jack O’Connell’s bloodthirsty antagonist, Remmick, is a Villain of the Year nominee.

Sorry, BabyEva Victor’s deeply personal story about a woman’s recovery from assault earned a Best Picture nomination, while also being recognized for Lead Actress (Victor) and Screenplay. 

Train Dreams, Clint Bentley’s contemplative drama about a laborer at the turn of the 20th century earned nominations for Best Picture, Director, Cinematography, Costume Design, Screenplay, Supporting Actor (William H. Macy), and Lead Actor (Joel Edgerton). The film is also one of six nominees for Best Pacific Northwest Feature Film.

Weapons, Zach Cregger’s buzzworthy horror film about the mysterious disappearance of a classroom of schoolchildren earned nominations for Best Picture, Youth Performance (Cary Christopher), and dual nominations for Amy Madigan in Supporting Actress and Villain of the Year for her memorable portrayal of Aunt Gladys.

Other films earning multiple nominations include Frankenstein (six nominations) and F1® The Movie (three nominations). Avatar: Fire and AshThe Phoenician Scheme, Predator: Badlands, Wicked: For Good,and Pacific Northwest documentary WTO/99 earned two nominations each.

As previously announced, the Seattle Film Critics Society recognizes six films this year for Best Pacific Northwest Feature Film. In addition to the aforementioned Train Dreams and WTO/99, this year’s nominees include documentaries Not One Drop of Blood and Wolf Land (Director’s Cut)and narrative features To Kill a Wolf and Twinless, New this year, the SFCS has added a second Pacific Northwest Award recognizing short films. This year’s inaugural nominees include Charlotte, 1994; A Fateful Weekend; Shelly’s Leg; Songs of Black Folk;and Style: A Seattle Basketball Story.

Winners of the 2025 Seattle Film Critics Society Awards will be announced Monday, December 15, 2025, across the Seattle Film Critics Society’s various social media platforms. 

The 2025 Seattle Film Critics Society Nominations

BEST PICTURE

BEST DIRECTOR

BEST ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE

BEST ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE

BEST ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

BEST ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE

BEST ENSEMBLE CAST

BEST YOUTH PERFORMANCE

BEST SCREENPLAY

BEST ANIMATED FILM

BEST DOCUMENTARY FILM

BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM

BEST PACIFIC NORTHWEST FEATURE FILM

BEST PACIFIC NORTHWEST SHORT FILM

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

BEST COSTUME DESIGN

BEST FILM EDITING

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN

BEST ACTION CHOREOGRAPHY

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS

VILLAIN OF THE YEAR

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The Seattle Film Critics Society is an association of professional critics working to facilitate a community that supports local productions and festivals; enhances public education, awareness, and appreciation of cinema; and strengthens the bonds of critical dialogue as it pertains to the cinematic arts.

Further information about the Seattle Film Critics Society’s annual awards can be found at seattlefilmcritics.com/upcoming-awards

Contacts: seattlefilmcritics.com | @seattlecritics | press@seattlefilmcritics.com

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