Boston Globe film critic Wesley Morris was awarded the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for criticism Monday, for essays and reviews that embodied what Pulitzer judges called “smart, inventive film criticism, distinguished by pinpoint prose and an easy traverse between the art house and big-screen box office.”
Morris, 36, who joined the Globe staff in 2002, won the prize for a range of movie reviews and essays published in 2011. Among the pieces submitted with his nomination were reviews of The Help, Drive, Water for Elephants, The Tree of Life, and Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol. His essays included two written upon the deaths of Oscar-winning director Sidney Lumet and Apple cofounder Steve Jobs.
Here are excerpts from his work:
Race, class, and Hollywood gloss in ‘The Help’
Terrence Malick’s ‘The Tree of Life’ open to interpretation
Tom Cruise’s latest ‘Mission,’ should you choose to accept it
Why a movie about car thieves is the most progressive force in American cinema
‘Drive’ delivers brutal violence without breaking a sweat
For better or worse, he tamed technology
Remembering Sidney Lumet, a prince of New York City filmmakers
‘Scream’ returns, and (surprise!) people are dying


