When it comes to award-season attention, Netflix is having an awfully good week.

Hot on the heels of the IFP Gotham Awards breaking big for the streamer’s “Marriage Story,” the New York Film Critics Circle convened Wednesday to choose Martin Scorsese’s big-budget Netflix drama, “The Irishman,” as the year’s best picture. Joe Pesci also picked up a supporting-actor trophy for the film, which tells a decade-spanning tale of loyalty and criminal ties.

Netflix made its way into three other categories. Supporting-actress winner Laura Dern was cited for her work in both “Marriage Story” and Sony’s “Little Women,” while the animated-feature honor went to “I Lost My Body.” Mati Diop’s “Atlantics,” a notable prizewinner at Cannes, won best first film.

Elsewhere, the critics circle endeavored to spread the wealth. The wins for lead acting, given to Lupita Nyong’o for “Us” and Antonio Banderas for “Pain and Glory,” will help both performers’ on-the-bubble Oscar bids. And though the critics snubbed the “Uncut Gems” star Adam Sandler and left Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” out of the top two categories, both films can content themselves with victories: a directing nod for the “Uncut Gems” auteurs Josh and Benny Safdie and a screenplay win for Tarantino.

The Los Angeles critics will weigh in with their own picks this weekend. Will they double down on the selections of their New York colleagues, or give other contenders a boost?