behind the scenes // ST. LOUIS FILM CRITICS ASSOCIATION AWARDS (2024)
I like to think voting in the St. Louis Film Critics Association has more Stilgar vibes than Feyd-Rautha vibes. Which is to say, more “As it is written!” and less “May thy knife chip and shatter!”
Though the 20-ish of us are all passionate about our favorite films, we haven’t resorted to knife duels to the death to determine winners (yet). This is my third year voting, and this is the largest batch of nominees yet. In 2022 we nominated 43 films in 23 categories, in 2023 we nominated 44 films in 24 categories, and this year, we nominated 53 films in 26 categories. Boy, I felt that increase. Though I had seen more new releases in 2024 than in previous years, there were still 28 titles I missed before my peers made them nominees. (And frankly, a few of them were barely on my radar, which highlights the varied marketing budgets available to different kinds of films.) I was able to squeeze 16 of them in the week between nominations and final voting, thus viewing the required 3-film minimum in every category except Horror. (The films I never got to: Alien: Romulus, Do Not Expect Too Much From the End of the World, Heretic, I Saw the TV Glow, The Last Showgirl, Late Night With the Devil, Longlegs, No Other Land, Queer, The Substance, Sugarcane, and Will & Harper. I did end up covering my eyes through much of The Substance after it was nominated for Best Picture, though!)
In the past, I’ve described our voting process and my ballot strategy. Little has changed since my 2022 and 2023 ballot round ups, so this year I’m keeping a pretty tight focus on the films themselves. As it is written: May thy watchlist grow ever longer!
Best Technical(-ish) Awards
Because these categories are so specific and varied, this is the time to let personal favorites shine or to acknowledge the merit in less-liked contenders. Re: the former, I wish Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F (which achieved many stunts practically) and Fly Me to the Moon (which sported an impressive wardrobe) had earned more attention for their efforts. Re: the latter, I couldn’t deny the Challengers score or the production design in The Brutalist even though those films didn’t work as a whole for me.
A few more thoughts:
I’m surprised Blitz and Saturday Night didn’t make more of a splash this Awards Season
It was a lackluster year for soundtracks. Even though I listened to Mean Girls and This Is Me…Now more than once on my own time, I was surprised I couldn't think of anything to surpass them on my list
Say what you will about Megalopolis, but I was never once bored! Even with a bonkers final product, Francis Ford Coppola is a master craftsman
Best Genre(-ish) Awards
These are the categories that inspire most of my frantic binge-watching between nominations and final voting. Of the 16 titles I watched in that week, 8 were in these categories, as were 9 of the 12 films I never found time for. (As always, I couldn’t vote in the Horror category because nothing inspires me to watch the minimum three films needed to vote.) Some of this is a matter of taste: I’m not drawn to documentaries in my free time, and though I did watch more than four last year, I didn’t think they deserved nominations. (Piece by Piece featured great animation, but it revealed nothing new about Pharrell). Some of this is because of the weak marketing for international films before the thick of Awards Season: I don’t remember hearing much, if anything, about Do Not Expect… before my peers nominated it, and I struggled to find a way to watch Dahomey.
A few more thoughts:
You shouldn’t be surprised if you know anything about me that I had already seen all the Action and Comedy nominees before nominations were announced
I overestimated the reputation of Gladiator II and Rebel Ridge among my peers, and I underestimated their love for Deadpool & Wolverine and Hundreds of Beavers
Let the record show I was underwhelmed by Emilia Pérez as far back as December
My final vote for Best Comedy was one of my toughest picks. I almost voted for Saturday Night (which made me laugh more), but I ultimately selected the sharper script of A Real Pain
My major discovery in the week between nominations and final voting was The Seed of Sacred Fig, which ending up making my top 10 of the year
Best Performance Awards
Here’s where my love for my top 10 films of the year—okay, and the Minions—shows. I wish performances like Josh Hartnett’s in Trap had a shot in the dark during Awards Season, and I’m baffled at the lack of campaigning for Javier Bardem in Dune: Part Two. While I’m not surprised, I hate that the Academy slept on The Bikeriders and Civil War in multiple categories.
You'll also notice the first of our two new categories this year: Best Voice Performance. I doubt our nominations will overlap so much in the future, but there were a lot of fans of Inside Out 2 and The Wild Robot for its inaugural event.
A few more thoughts:
Hard Truths was one of those barely-on-my-radar movies, but Marianne Jean-Baptiste wowed me so much she earned one of my few final votes outside my original batch of nominations
Like Soundtrack, Supporting Actress was a category I struggled to come up with strong candidates for, but Jennifer Lopez came through for me yet again. While I loved Nickel Boys, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor’s role was very supporting
Best of the Best Awards
Will Anora, The Brutalist, and A Complete Unknown stand the test of time? The consensus of this moment suggests so, though anyone who has followed Awards Season knows pop culture’s short memory. (I’m publishing this before Oscar night—it’s possible I’ll eat these words in just a few days.) You can tell from the small overlap between my top 10 and our cumulative top 10 that my taste varied from the consensus, but if I’d seen The Seed of the Sacred Fig sooner, it would’ve bumped Twisters off my list.
A few more thoughts:
Our second new category for 2024 was Best First Feature, which along with Best Scene, added five unique nominees
That Civil War scene feels like THE scene of 2024
My affection for Nickel Boys has only grown as Awards Season has continued
More of the Best of 2024
Check out more on the St. Louis Film Critics Association site
See the full list of our picks on Letterboxd
Read my personal list of the best films of the year
And add those films to your watchlist on Letterboxd















