Oscars 2018: Get Out wins Spirit Awards best film
- Published
Get Out has been named best film at the Film Independent Spirit Awards - which has predicted the best picture winner at the Oscars four years running.
Moonlight was seen as an outsider when it picked up the same award at the 2017 event before winning the Oscar.
Jordan Peele was named best director, for what is his feature film debut, at the beachside event in Los Angeles.
The Spirit Awards honour low-budget films and are seen as the precursor to the Academy Awards on Sunday.
Asked about the possibility of black horror film Get Out repeating the success of Moonlight in 2017 - and Spotlight, Birdman and 12 Years a Slave the previous years - Peele simply said: "It's Saturday. Tomorrow's tomorrow."
He is the first black filmmaker to be nominated for best picture, best director and best screenwriting.
He told the audience at the Santa Monica event: "I think it's clear to everybody in this room, across the country and across the world, that we're at the beginning of a renaissance right now.
"Our stories from the outside, stories from the people in this room - the same stories that independent filmmakers have been telling for years - are being recognised and honoured."
'It needed to exist'
He said the 23-day-shoot was "scrappy" and that he cried every day because he was so drained.
"This was not a film where anyone got a paycheque," he said. "We did this because we believed in the story. It wasn't a story anybody had seen before - it needed to exist."
The film stars London-born Daniel Kaluuya, who - when asked if he would star in a sequel if one was made - replied with incredulity: "Would I like to be in a Jordan Peele script? We just won!"
Speaking about the prospect of a sequel, Peele said: "We are not closed off to a sequel. The producers and I agree this is not the kind of movie you make a sequel to just to make a sequel, to make money.
"If we can get a story that feels worthy as a follow-up in this world, then we'll do it."
Peele said of Get Out - about a black man who steps into a nightmare when he visits his white girlfriend's family: "This project didn't start as a statement - it began as me wanting to make a film in my favourite genre… mind-bending horror."
Spirit Awards - the main winners
Best feature - Get Out
Best director - Jordan Peele, Get Out
Best screenplay - Greta Gerwig, Lady Bird
Best first screenplay - Emily V Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani, The Big Sick
Best supporting female - Allison Janney, I, Tonya
Best supporting male - Sam Rockwell, Three Billboards
Best female lead - Frances McDormand, Three Billboards
Best male lead - Timothee Chalamet, Call Me By Your Name
Robert Altman award - Mudbound, directed by Dee Rees
The Spirit Awards honour films that have been made for a budget of $20m or less. Get Out had a budget of $4.5m and made $255m at the box office.
Frances McDormand picked up the best actress award for her role as a grieving mother hell-bent on getting justice in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri - she's widely expected to get the same title at the Oscars.
She said she appreciated the fact she could swear during the more informal awards ("the dress code is 'get dressed'", co-host John Mulaney had quipped) and added: "I am independent and I'm spirited - that's why I'm here."
Timothee Chalamet, who won best actor for Call Me By Your Name - a romance set in 1980s Italy - told the event that he thought change was on the way in the film industry.
"This is a whole new wave - we're going to be fine, we're going to be good," he said. "We're going to make this change."
Call Me By Your Name, starring Armie Hammer - who FaceTimed Chalamet during the awards, also won best cinematography.
'I want to play dark characters'
Other awards went to Allison Janney for best supporting actress for I, Tonya and Sam Rockwell, best supporting actor for Three Billboards.
Janney is widely tipped to win the Oscar for playing LaVona Golden, the domineering mother of figure skater Tonya Harding.
"I've played a lot of confused and complicated women, but not any women this dark," she said. "I don't think people usually think of me this way. I guess I want to play more evil, dark characters."
Asked about the fact Jimmy Kimmel has indicated he won't focus on Me Too and the Time's Up movement when hosting the Oscars on Sunday, she said: "Jimmy Kimmel's got a huge task in hand to host the Oscars. I know he's going to do a fantastic job.
"I think the movement is being addressed in so many other ways - I'm leaving it in his capable hands."
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