Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Screenplay
The Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Screenplay is an award given by the Florida Film Critics Circle[1] to honor the finest achievements in film-making. The award has been split into two categories, Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Original Screenplay, since 2010.
Winners
1990s
| Year | Winner | Writer(s) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1996[2] | Fargo | Joel Coen and Ethan Coen | |
| 1997[3] | L.A. Confidential | Curtis Hanson and Brian Helgeland | novel by James Ellroy |
| 1998[4] | Shakespeare in Love | Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard | |
| 1999[5] | Election | Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor | novel by Tom Perrotta |
2000s
| Year | Winner | Writer(s) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000[6] | State and Main | David Mamet | |
| 2001[7] | Memento | Christopher Nolan | short story by Jonathan Nolan |
| 2002[8] | Adaptation. | Charlie and Donald Kaufman | book by Susan Orlean |
| 2003[9] | Lost in Translation | Sofia Coppola | |
| 2004[10] | Sideways | Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor | novel by Rex Pickett |
| 2005[11] | Brokeback Mountain | Larry McMurtry and Diana Ossana | short story by E. Annie Proulx |
| 2006[12] | The Departed | William Monahan | film by Andrew Lau and Alan Mak |
| 2007[13] | Juno | Diablo Cody | |
| 2008[14] | Slumdog Millionaire | Simon Beaufoy | novel by Vikas Swarup |
| 2009[15] | (500) Days of Summer | Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber |
2010s
2020s
| Year | Winner | Writer(s) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020[26] | I'm Thinking of Ending Things (Adapted) | Charlie Kaufman | novel by Iain Reid |
| Minari (Original) | Lee Isaac Chung | ||
| 2021[27] | The Power of the Dog (Adapted) | Jane Campion | novel by Thomas Savage |
| The French Dispatch (Original) | Wes Anderson, Roman Coppola, Hugo Guinness, and Jason Schwartzman | ||
| 2022[28] | Women Talking (Adapted) | Sarah Polley | novel by Miriam Toews |
| Decision to Leave (Original) | Park Chan-wook and Jeong Seo-Gyeong | ||
| 2023[29] | Poor Things (Adapted) | Tony McNamara | novel by Alasdair Gray |
| Past Lives (Original) | Celine Song | ||
| 2024 | Queer (Adapted) | Justin Kuritzkes | novel by William S. Burroughs |
| I Saw the TV Glow (Original) | Jane Schoenbrun |
References
- ^ "Home". floridafilmcritics.com.
- ^ "1996 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "1997 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "1998 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "1999 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2000 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2001 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2002 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2003 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2004 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2005 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2006 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2007 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2008 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2009 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2010 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2011 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2012 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2013 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2014 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2015 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2016 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2017 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2018 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2019 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2020 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "2021 FFCC Award Winners".
- ^ "Florida Film Critics Circle Awards 2022", Wikipedia, 2023-01-15, retrieved 2023-02-21
- ^ "'The Boy and the Heron' Flies High with Florida Film Critics" (Press release). Florida Film Critics Circle. December 21, 2023. Retrieved December 22, 2023.