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Up in the Air wins key award in race to Oscars

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Fri, 04 Dec 2009 12:00p.m.

George Clooney and Vera Farmiga in Up in the Air, which opens in New Zealand January 14

George Clooney and Vera Farmiga in Up in the Air, which opens in New Zealand January 14

Up in the Air was named best picture from the US National Board of Review and won a total of four awards.

Directed by Jason Reitman (Juno, Thank You for Smoking), the film stars George Clooney as a perpetually travelling contractor who fires people for a living. The US National Board of Review, which announced its awards Thursday, also chose Clooney as best actor, an honour he shares with Morgan Freeman who plays Nelson Mandela in Invictus.

Up in the Air also won best supporting actress for Anna Kendrick and best adapted screenplay, penned by Reitman and Sheldon Turner working from Walter Kirn's book of the same name.

Already an Oscar favourite, the win boosts the awards prospects of Up in the Air. The last two NBR winners - No Country for Old Men and Slumdog Millionaire - have gone on to win best picture at the Academy Awards.

Click here to watch the Up in the Air trailer.

Best director went to Clint Eastwood for Invictus, the story of Mandela's embrace of the South African national rugby team.

Carey Mulligan was chosen best actress for her lead performance in An Education, a coming-of-age story set in 1960s London. Woody Harrelson won best supporting actor for The Messenger. In the film, the actor plays Captain Tony Stone, who is tasked to inform the families of fallen soldiers.

Best animated film went to Pixar's Up, an adventure about an elderly man who has always yearned for adventure and finds it when he flies away in his house with a boy who has stowed away. The Cove, about the slaughter of dolphins in a Japanese village, won best documentary. The prison drama A Prophet won best foreign film.

NBR President Annie Schulhof noted the large number of films - from The Cove to Up in the Air - that reflected social conscience. The group cited Invictus and the documentaries Burma VJ: Reporting from a Closed Country and The Most Dangerous Man in America for its "freedom of expression" award.

Joel and Ethan Coen won best original screenplay for their script to A Serious Man, a black comedy set in the 1960s.

The NBR also singled out Wes Anderson for a special filmmaking achievement award for his stop-motion animated The Fantastic Mr. Fox, which Anderson co-wrote, directed, lent his voice to and deeply involved himself in the arduous minutia of the animation.

Best ensemble went to It's Complicated, a romantic comedy starring Meryl Streep, Alec Baldwin, Steve Martin and John Krasinski.

The awards also highlighted breakthrough performances, honoring those by Jeremy Renner (The Hurt Locker) and Gabourey Sidibe (Precious). And the US National Board of Review cited the directorial debuts of Duncan Jones (Moon), Oren Moverman (The Messenger) and Marc Webb ((500) Days of Summer).

The US National Board of Review, which is composed of film historians, students and educators, was founded in 1909. The awards will be handed out January 12 in a New York gala hosted by Meredith Vieira.

AP

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