2018 2
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Nespresso, Co-host of the Official BAFTA Nominees’ Party and a Platinum Partner to the EE British Academy Film Awards in 2018, celebrates the launch of Nespresso Talents 2018.
www.nespresso.com/talents 3
congratulates our clients on their 2018 EE British Academy Film Awards nominations
Best Film DARKEST HOUR TIM BEVAN ERIC FELLNER ANTHONY MCCARTEN THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI MARTIN MCDONAGH* Outstanding British Film DARKEST HOUR JOE WRIGHT TIM BEVAN ERIC FELLNER ANTHONY MCCARTEN THE DEATH OF STALIN LAURENT ZEITOUN YANN ZENOU GOD’S OWN COUNTRY FRANCIS LEE* THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI MARTIN MCDONAGH* Director DENIS VILLENEUVE** BLADE RUNNER 2049 MARTIN MCDONAGH* THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI Documentary CITY OF GHOSTS MATTHEW HEINEMAN
Original Screenplay JORDAN PEELE GET OUT MARTIN MCDONAGH* THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI Adapted Screenplay AARON SORKIN MOLLY’S GAME Leading Actress ANNETTE BENING FILM STARS DON’T DIE IN LIVERPOOL MARGOT ROBBIE*** I, TONYA SALLY HAWKINS† THE SHAPE OF WATER SAOIRSE RONAN†† LADY BIRD Supporting Actress KRISTIN SCOTT THOMAS††† DARKEST HOUR Supporting Actor HUGH GRANT PADDINGTON 2 WILLEM DAFOE THE FLORIDA PROJECT WOODY HARRELSON THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI EE Rising Star Award JOSH O’CONNOR†††
*Shared representation with The Knight Hall Agency Ltd †Shared representation with Conway van Gelder Grant ††Shared representation with MacFarlane Chard Associates **Shared representation with Claude Girard Agency ***Shared representation with Aran Michael Management †††Shared representation with Independent Talent Group
LE A RNING LINES
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This year’s brochure cover artwork is not just a pretty picture, there’s meaning behind its design. It shows two sets of data* indicating the international impact and reputation of the British film industry. The red and white lines, which form the rings around the lens (fig. 1), illustrate the percentage spend on UK film production in 2016. This reached the highest level on record (since 1994) at £1.6bn, a 13 per cent increase on 2015, with the red lines representing the £180m growth. Inward investment films contributed more than £1.3bn towards this total, a 16 per cent increase year-on-year, setting another record high. While it would be shortsighted to believe everything in the industry is fine (the number of productions has decreased from 2015, for instance), the growth in investment does suggest confidence in the quality of British productions and the skill of its practitioners. This year’s Film Awards nominations are perhaps the most ‘British’ for more than a decade, with three of the five Best Film nominees having significant British investment and 40 per cent of the performance nominees being British. It is perhaps
fitting that the cover art’s next statistic should focus on UK acting talent (fig. 2). Since 2001, more than 60 per cent (121) of the top 200 films at the global box office have featured British actors in leading (52) or supporting (69) roles. That’s almost two thirds of the list, as represented by the combined white and red lines that fill a third of the camera’s rings. It’s noteworthy, too, that if animated titles are removed then the figure rises to an incredible 79 per cent. British talent, both in front of and behind the camera, are some of the most sought-after in the world and BAFTA is working hard to ensure that this remarkable legacy not only lasts but grows. Much of our work outside of the Awards is designed to support new and emerging talent, whatever their background, and at a grassroots level, we are also seeking to inspire children and young people to consider working in the moving image industries. Find out more about our activities on page 107 of this brochure and online: www.bafta.org
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* Source: The BFI Statistical Yearbook 2017
T H E STO RY B EH I N D T H IS YE A R ÕS COV ER A RT WO R K...
CONTENTS
W E LCO M E
S P E C I A L AWA R D S
8 HRH The Duke Of Cambridge, KG
62 The Fellowship
Strong female characters, dystopias, corruption and what it means to be human are all elements that regularly feature in the exceptional filmography of this year’s Fellowship recipient: Sir Ridley Scott. Words by Rosie Fletcher
9 Amanda Berry obe / Jane Lush 11
Marc Allera
N O M I N AT I O NS 15
The Nominations in full
40
Juries & Chapters
72
BEST FIL M NOM INEES 43 Call Me By Your Name
Life’s just peachy in this exquisite, sun-soaked romance of tantalising flirtations and acute pangs of the heart. Words by Matthew Turner
F O R Y O U R E Y E S O N LY: A P H O T O G R A P H I C E S S AY 81 The intimate narrative of the Film Awards,
47 Darkest Hour
A shadowy thriller about the uncertain early days of Winston Churchill’s first premiership. Words by Neil Smith
as seen through the eye of photographer Sarah Lee.
99
51 Dunkirk
In Memoriam
107 Focus on Film
With its interweaving stories and escalating momentum, Dunkirk ships a whole new approach to the classic war genre. Words by Christina Newland
117 Officers of the Academy 119 Partners of the Academy 121 Film Awards Partners
55 The Shape of Water
123 Film Awards Gift Providers
There’s a haunting nostalgia and deep love for the silver age of cinema swimming through this unique and whimsical fairy tale romance. Words by Clarisse Loughrey 59
Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema BAFTA goes back to school for this special award, celebrating the incredible contribution the National Film and Television School has made to the moving image. Words by Rich Matthews
125 Acknowledgements & Credits
hree Billboards in Ebbing, Missouri T A savage black comedy that’s as sharp with its verbal barbs and bloody, visceral action as it is with its poignant moments of grief. Words by Charlotte O’Sullivan
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H R H T H E D U K E O F C A M B R I D G E, KG President of the Academy
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WELCOM E EE
BRITISH
TO
ACA DE MY
THE FIL M
AWA RDS
very warm welcome to this year’s EE British Academy Film Awards, our annual celebration of the very best achievement in film and recognising creative talent from across the globe. Congratulations to all our nominees: the outstanding films and performances nominated across all categories this evening demonstrate how our industry is thriving. It’s been a fantastic year for film and, in particular, for British talent - 71 Brits are among this year’s nominees. This success is captured on the brochure’s front cover, which is a visual representation of how the UK film industry is booming and illustrates the part our homegrown talent is playing within the industry internationally. This evening’s event is as much about shining a light on new voices and breakthrough performances as it is about honouring the contribution from those of you who have worked in the industry for decades. Each year, through categories such as Outstanding Debut, Short Film and Short Animation and EE Rising Star, we are able to identify and reward the next biggest names in film across a range of crafts. Celebrating and nurturing that talent – through activity and initiatives not only in the UK but in Los Angeles, New York and Asia – is at the heart of what we do. BAFTA is committed to making sure that talented individuals are given the opportunities and encouragement needed to succeed in the creative industries. The film industry has also been in the news for the wrong reasons in the last few months. BAFTA unequivocally promotes a professional environment that protects all who work in it from bullying or harassment, and alongside organisations such as the British Film Institute, Women in Film & Television, Equity and many others, we have pooled our knowledge and resources to create a unified set of principles and guidelines. At this watershed moment, let’s work together in resetting the tone and continuing to build a future where anyone – regardless of who they are, or where they are from – is able to flourish in the industry we love so much. We can be a catalyst for real and lasting change. Have a wonderful evening. •
A
A M AN DA BERRY
OBE
Chief Executive of the Academy
JANE LUSH
Chair of the Academy
FOLLOW US #EEBA F TA s
bafta.org
/BA F TA
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@BA F TA
BA F TA
BA F TA
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WELCOM E
FROM
CEO, EE
SPONSO R
elcome to the EE British Academy Film Awards, a celebration of another amazing year in British and global filmmaking. The last 12 months have continued the trend of thoughtful low-budget pictures sharing the limelight with studio blockbusters. We’ve seen Get Out using a traditional horror format to shine a torch on certain societal ills, and Blade Runner 2049 paint a stunningly beautiful picture of an often less-than-beautiful future. I remember watching the original Blade Runner and being amazed by the scene in which Deckard (Harrison Ford) zooms in and enhances a photograph to help his investigation. Now, of course, we do it on our mobile phones. As yet, I’ve not seen a commercial case for another feature of the movie – flying cars – but I’ve no doubt Tesla is working on something and they’ll need mobile connectivity when it eventually comes. I typically include in this message a reflection on how many years BAFTA and EE have been working together. You could say that, this year, our partnership has come of age. It’s 21 wonderful years that we’ve been celebrating the best in international filmmaking. Naturally, all of us at EE are THOUGHTFUL delighted to once again present the EE Rising Star award, which LOW-BUDGET last year went to the wonderfully energetic Tom Holland. This year, PICTURES HAVE a jury comprising of chair Marc Samuelson, Philippa Lowthorpe, SHARED THE Lucy Bevan, Leo Davis, Nadine Marsh-Edwards, Edith Bowman and LIMELIGHT Georgina Campbell whittled down a huge longlist to a commendable WITH STUDIO coterie of exciting emerging talent. Good luck to everyone that made BLOCKBUSTERS. this year’s shortlist. I want to sign-off by saying that the film that moved me most this year was Dunkirk, which made watching the human reality of Operation Dynamo a truly visceral experience. In 2018, we will increasingly enjoy video content on small screens while on the move; this, however, was one to be watched, heard and felt on the big screen. It’s one of the many reasons all of us at EE love cinema, and are so excited we get to work with BAFTA every year. Enjoy your evening! •
W
MARC ALLERA
OUR
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Champagne for the Independently Minded
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Champagne Taittinger 1 2
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Champagne Officiel de BAFTA depuis 2003.
Official Champagne to BAFTA 1 3
WINE GROWER CREATOR FINE CHAMPAGNE 1 4
THE NO
M IN AT IONS
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BEFORE YOU WALK THE RED CARPET, FLY IT.
Proud to be the official airline of the EE British Academy Film Awards.
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American Airlines, the Flight Symbol logo and the Tail Symbol are marks of American Airlines, Inc. oneworld is a mark of the oneworld alliance, LLC. © 2016 American Airlines, Inc. All rights reserved.
A DA PTED SCREENPL AY
C A L L M E BY YO U R N A M E
T H E D E AT H O F S TA L I N
James Ivory
Armando Iannucci, Ian Martin, David Schneider
F I L M S TA RS D O N ’ T D I E
M O L LY ’ S G A M E
PA D D I N G T O N 2
IN LIVERPOOL
Aaron Sorkin
Simon Farnaby, Paul King
Matt Greenhalgh
ANIM ATED FIL M
COCO
LOVIN G VINCENT
Lee Unkrich, Darla K Anderson
Dorota Kobiela, Hugh Welchman, Ivan Mactaggart
MY LI FE AS A COU RGET TE
Claude Barras, Max Karli
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FOX SEARCHLIGHT PICTURES & TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX would like to thank the BRITISH ACADEMY OF FILM AND TELEVISION ARTS and proudly congratulate our nominees.
BEST FILM J. Miles Dale, Guillermo del Toro DIRECTOR Guillermo del Toro ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Guillermo del Toro & Vanessa Taylor LEADING ACTRESS Sally Hawkins SUPPORTING ACTRESS Octavia Spencer ORIGINAL MUSIC Alexandre Desplat CINEMATOGRAPHY Dan Laustsen EDITING Sidney Wolinsky PRODUCTION DESIGN Paul Denham Austerberry, Shane Vieau, Jeff Melvin COSTUME DESIGN Luis Sequeira SOUND Glen Gauthier, Nathan Robitaille, Nelson Ferreira, Christian Cooke, Brad Zoern SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS Dennis Berardi, Trey Harrell, Mike Hill, Kevin Scott
BEST FILM Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin, Martin McDonagh OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM Martin McDonagh, Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin DIRECTOR Martin McDonagh ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Martin McDonagh LEADING ACTRESS Frances McDormand SUPPORTING ACTOR Woody Harrelson SUPPORTING ACTOR Sam Rockwell CINEMATOGRAPHY Ben Davis EDITING Jon Gregory
SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS Joe Letteri, Dan Lemmon, Daniel Barrett, Joel Whist
© All rights reserved.
1 8
BEST FILM
C A L L M E BY YO U R N A M E
DARKEST HOUR
Emilie Georges, Luca Guadagnino, Marco Morabito, Peter Spears
Tim Bevan, Lisa Bruce, Eric Fellner, Anthony McCarten, Douglas Urbanski
DUNKIRK
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
THREE BILLBOARDS
Christopher Nolan, Emma Thomas
Guillermo del Toro, J Miles Dale
O U T S I D E E B B I N G, M I S S O U R I
Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin, Martin McDonagh
BRITISH SHORT ANIM ATION
H AV E H E A R T
MAMOON
Will Anderson
Ben Steer
P O L E S A PA R T
Paloma Baeza, Ser En Low
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We proudly congratulate our EE British Academy Film Awards Nominees LEADING ACTRESS
OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI
DARKEST HOUR
LADY BIRD
LISA BRUCE
GRETA GERWIG
FRANCES MCDORMAND LEADING ACTOR FILM STARS DON’T DIE IN LIVERPOOL
JAMIE BELL CALL ME BY YOUR NAME
TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET BEST FILM CALL ME BY YOUR NAME
THE DEATH OF STALIN
ARMANDO IANNUCCI
ARMANDO IANNUCCI
PADDINGTON 2
PADDINGTON 2
SIMON FARNABY
SIMON FARNABY
OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER
CINEMATOGRAPHY
LADY MACBETH
ROGER DEAKINS
ALICE BIRCH WRITER
DARKEST HOUR
DOCUMENTARY
LISA BRUCE
ICARUS
FIRST THEY KILLED MY FATHER
THE DEATH OF STALIN
ALICE BIRCH
LADY MACBETH
PETER SPEARS
FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
DAN COGAN BRYAN FOGEL AN INCONVENIENT SEQUEL
ANGELINA JOLIE
BONNI COHEN JON SHENK
THE SALESMAN
JANE
ASGHAR FARHADI
ELLEN KURAS
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BLADE RUNNER 2049
DUNKIRK
HOYTE VAN HOYTEMA EDITING BABY DRIVER
PAUL MACHLISS EE RISING STAR AWARD
TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET
BRITISH SHORT FILM
AAMIR
C O W B OY DAV E
Vika Evdokimenko, Emma Stone, Oliver Shuster
Colin O’Toole, Jonas Mortensen
A DROWNING M AN
WORK
W R E N B OYS
Mahdi Fleifel, Signe Byrge Sørensen, Patrick Campbell
Aneil Karia, Scott O’Donnell
Harry Lighton, Sorcha Bacon, John Fitzpatrick
CINEM ATOGR A PHY
BL ADE RUNNER 2049
DARKEST HOUR
Roger Deakins
Bruno Delbonnel
DUNKIRK
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
THREE BILLBOARDS
Hoyte van Hoytema
Dan Laustsen
O U T S I D E E B B I N G, M I S S O U R I
Ben Davis
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HERE’S TO A VICTORIOUS EVENING Working Title would like to thank the EE British Academy Film Awards and congratulates all the outstanding nominees
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COSTUME DESIGN
BEAUT Y AND THE BEAST
DARKEST HOUR
Jacqueline Durran
Jacqueline Durran
I , T O N YA
PHANTOM THREAD
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
Jennifer Johnson
Mark Bridges
Luis Sequeira
DIRECTOR
BL ADE RUNNER 2049
C A L L M E BY YO U R N A M E
Denis Villeneuve
Luca Guadagnino
DUNKIRK
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
THREE BILLBOARDS
Christopher Nolan
Guillermo del Toro
O U T S I D E E B B I N G, M I S S O U R I
Martin McDonagh
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C O N G R AT U L AT I O N S T O A L L
NOMINEES AND WINNERS
www.pinewoodgroup.com 2 4
DOCUM ENTA RY
CITY OF GHOSTS
I A M N OT YO U R N E G R O
Matthew Heineman
Raoul Peck
ICARUS
AN INCONVENIENT SEQUEL
JANE
Bryan Fogel, Dan Cogan
Bonni Cohen, Jon Shenk
Brett Morgen, Bryan Burk
EDITING
BA BY D R I V E R
BL ADE RUNNER 2049
Jonathan Amos, Paul Machliss
Joe Walker
DUNKIRK
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
THREE BILLBOARDS
Lee Smith
Sidney Wolinsky
O U T S I D E E B B I N G, M I S S O U R I
Jon Gregory
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FIL M NOT IN THE ENGLISH L A NGUAGE
ELLE
FIRST THEY KILLED MY FAT H E R
Paul Verhoeven, Saïd Ben Saïd
Angelina Jolie, Rithy Panh
THE HANDMAIDEN
LOVELESS
THE SALESMAN
Park Chan-wook, Syd Lim
Andrey Zvyagintsev, Alexander Rodnyansky
Asghar Farhadi, Alexandre Mallet-Guy
LEA DING ACTOR
D A N I E L D AY- L E W I S
D A N I E L K A L U U YA
Phantom Thread
Get Out
GARY OLDM AN
JA MIE BELL
TIMOTHÉ E CHAL AMET
Darkest Hour
Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool
Call Me by Your Name
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FILM4 PROUDLY CONGRATULATES ALL OUR 2018 BAFTA NOMINEES
I AM NOT A WITCH OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER Rungano Nyoni (Writer/Director), Emily Morgan (Producer)
THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI BEST FILM OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM DIRECTOR Martin McDonagh ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Martin McDonagh LEADING ACTRESS Frances McDormand SUPPORTING ACTOR Sam Rockwell SUPPORTING ACTOR Woody Harrelson CINEMATOGRAPHY Ben Davis EDITING Jon Gregory
WORK BRITISH SHORT FILM Aneil Karia, Scott O’Donnell
LEADING ACTRESS
ANNETTE BENING
FR ANCES McDORMAND
Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
MARGOT ROBBIE
S A L LY H A W K I N S
SAOIRSE RONAN
I, Tonya
The Shape of Water
Lady Bird
MAKE UP & HAIR
BL ADE RUNNER 2049
DARKEST HOUR
Donald Mowat, Kerry Warn
David Malinowski, Ivana Primorac, Lucy Sibbick, Kazuhiro Tsuji
I , T O N YA
VICTORIA & ABDUL
WONDER
Deborah La Mia Denaver, Adruitha Lee
Daniel Phillips, Lou Sheppard
Naomi Bakstad, Robert A Pandini, Arjen Tuiten
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ORIGINAL MUSIC
BL ADE RUNNER 2049
DARKEST HOUR
Benjamin Wallfisch, Hans Zimmer
Dario Marianelli
DUNKIRK
PHANTOM THREAD
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
Hans Zimmer
Jonny Greenwood
Alexandre Desplat
O RI GINA L SCREENPL AY
GET OUT
I , T O N YA
Jordan Peele
Steven Rogers
L A DY B I R D
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
THREE BILLBOARDS
Greta Gerwig
Guillermo del Toro, Vanessa Taylor
O U T S I D E E B B I N G, M I S S O U R I
Martin McDonagh
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Congratulations to tonight’s nominees GOD’S OWN COUNTRY I AM NOT A WITCH KINGDOM OF US LADY MACBETH WREN BOYS
#BFIBacked #NationalLottery bfi.org.uk/filmfund
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OUTSTA NDING BRITISH FIL M
DARKEST HOUR
T H E D E AT H O F S TA L I N
GOD’S OWN COU NTRY
Joe Wright, Tim Bevan, Lisa Bruce, Eric Fellner, Anthony McCarten, Douglas Urbanski
Armando Iannucci, Kevin Loader, Laurent Zeitoun, Yann Zenou, Ian Martin, David Schneider
Francis Lee, Manon Ardisson, Jack Tarling
L A DY M AC B E T H
PA D D I N G T O N 2
THREE BILLBOARDS
William Oldroyd, Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly, Alice Birch
Paul King, David Heyman, Simon Farnaby
O U T S I D E E B B I N G, M I S S O U R I
Martin McDonagh, Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin
OUTSTA NDING DEBUT By a British Writer, Director or Producer
THE GHOUL
I AM NOT A WITCH
Gareth Tunley (Writer/Director/Producer), Jack Healy Guttmann, Tom Meeten (Producers)
Rungano Nyoni (Writer/Director), Emily Morgan (Producer)
JAW B O N E
KINGDOM OF US
L A DY M AC B E T H
Johnny Harris (Writer/Producer), Thomas Napper (Director)
Lucy Cohen (Director)
Alice Birch (Writer), William Oldroyd (Director), Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly (Producer)
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SONY PICTURES RELEASING (UK) THANKS THE BRITISH ACADEMY OF FILM AND TELEVISION ARTS AND PROUDLY CONGRATULATES OUR EE BRITISH ACADEMY FILM AWARDS NOMINEES
EMILIE GEORGES, LUCA GUADAGNINO, MARCO MORABITO, PETER SPEARS BEST FILM
CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER SUPPORTING ACTOR
LUCA GUADAGNINO DIRECTOR JAMES IVORY ADAPTED SCREENPLAY TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET LEADING ACTOR
DENIS VILLENEUVE DIRECTOR BENJAMIN WALLFISCH, HANS ZIMMER ORIGINAL MUSIC ROGER DEAKINS CINEMATOGRAPHY JOE WALKER EDITING
JONATHAN AMOS, PAUL MACHLISS EDITING
DENNIS GASSNER, ALESSANDRA QUERZOLA PRODUCTION DESIGN
TIM CAVAGIN, MARY H. ELLIS, DAN MORGAN, JEREMY PRICE, JULIAN SLATER SOUND
DONALD MOWAT, KERRY WARN MAKE UP & HAIR RON BARTLETT, DOUG HEMPHILL, MARK MANGINI, MAC RUTH, THEO GREEN SOUND RICHARD R. HOOVER, PAUL LAMBERT, GERD NEFZER, JOHN NELSON SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
www.sonypictures.co.uk
© 2018 Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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PRODUCTION DESIGN
BEAUT Y AND THE BEAST
BL ADE RUNNER 2049
Sarah Greenwood, Katie Spencer
Dennis Gassner, Alessandra Querzola
DARKEST HOUR
DUNKIRK
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
Sarah Greenwood, Katie Spencer
Nathan Crowley, Gary Fettis
Paul Austerberry, Jeff Melvin, Shane Vieau
SOUND
BA BY D R I V E R
BL ADE RUNNER 2049
Tim Cavagin, Mary H Ellis, Dan Morgan, Jeremy Price, Julian Slater
Ron Bartlett, Theo Green, Doug Hemphill, Mark Mangini, Mac Ruth
DUNKIRK
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
S TA R WA R S : T H E L A S T J E D I
Alex Gibson, Richard King, Gregg Landaker, Gary A Rizzo, Mark Weingarten
Christian Cooke, Nelson Ferreira, Glen Gauthier, Nathan Robitaille, Brad Zoern
Ren Klyce, David Parker, Michael Semanick, Stuart Wilson, Matthew Wood
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CONGRATULATIONS SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS NOMINEES
JOE LETTERI DAN LEMMON DANIEL BARRETT JOEL WHIST
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© 2017 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
BL ADE RUNNER 2049
DUNKIRK
Richard R Hoover, Paul Lambert, Gerd Nefzer, John Nelson
Paul Corbould, Scott Fisher, Andrew Jackson, Andrew Lockley
T H E S H A P E O F WAT E R
S TA R WA R S : T H E L A S T J E D I
Dennis Berardi, Trey Harrell, Mike Hill, Kevin Scott
Stephen Aplin, Chris Corbould, Ben Morris, Neal Scanlan
WA R F O R T H E P L A N E T OF THE APES
Daniel Barrett, Dan Lemmon, Joe Letteri, Joel Whist
SUPPORTING ACTOR
CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER
HUGH GRANT
All the Money in the World
Paddington 2
SAM ROCKWELL
WILLEM DAFOE
WO O DY H A R R E L S O N
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
The Florida Project
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
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UK RootMetricsÂŽ Report H1 2017
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SUPPORTING ACTRESS
ALLISON JANNEY
KRISTIN SCOTT THOMAS
I, Tonya
Darkest Hour
L AURIE METCALF
LESLEY MANVILLE
O C TAV I A S P E N C E R
Lady Bird
Phantom Thread
The Shape of Water
THE EE RISING STA R AWA RD Voted for by the public
D A N I E L K A L U U YA
JOSH O’CON N OR
FLORENCE PUGH
TESSA THOMPSON
TIMOTHÉ E CHAL AMET
Nominations are correct at the time of going to print. BAFTA reserves the right to make changes to the names listed at any time up until 18 February 2018.
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J URIES
&
CHA PTERS
JURIES
BRITISH SHORT A N I M AT I O N Iain Harvey (Chair) Julie Baines Gaëlle Denis Mario Cavalli Danny Hambrook Akiya Henry Dave Ingham Robin Lyons Loraine Marshall Magdalena Osinska Chris Rose BRITISH SHORT FIL M Andrew Curtis (Chair) Bola Agbaje Ole Birkeland Rupert Evans Kevin Loader Nat Luurtsema Úna Ní Dhonghaíle Allon Reich Nitin Sawhney With thanks to Anna Duffield, Hong Khaou, Kelly Valentine Hendry and Penny Woolcock for their help in the shortlisting stage, and the 200 BAFTA members who took part in the longlisting groups.
O U T S TA N D I N G BRITISH FIL M Marc Samuelson (Chair) Amma Asante Sean Ellis Jo-Jo Ellison Sally El Hosaini Andrew Haigh Rob Hardy Gillian Hawser Abi Morgan Nisha Parti Matthew Penry-Davey
CHAPTERS
O U T S TA N D I N G D EB U T BY A B R I T I S H W R I T ER, D I R E C TO R OR PRODUCER Tanya Seghatchian (Chair) Babak Anvari David Arnold Anthony Chen Lucinda Coxon Charles Gant Tony Grisoni Dixie Linder Wendy Mitchell Clare Stewart Matthew Warchus Ruth Wilson With thanks to Jinx Godfrey, Elizabeth Karlsen and Gabrielle Tana for their help in the longlisting stages.
E E R I S I N G S TA R Marc Samuelson (Chair) Matt Bagwell Lucy Bevan Edith Bowman Georgina Campbell Robbie Collin Leo Davis Lena de Casparis Larushka Ivan-Zadeh Philippa Lowthorpe Tom Macklin Nadine Marsh-Edwards With thanks to Charles Gant, Kate Buckley and Pippa Markham for their help in the longlisting stages.
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CR A F T CHA PTERS Cinematography Costume Design Directing Editing Make Up & Hair Music Production Design Screenplay Sound Special Visual Effects O P T- I N CH A P T ERS Animation British Short Animation and British Short Film Documentary Film Not in the English Language Outstanding British Film Craft chapters consist of Academy members with specialist experience in the relative field. Opt-in chapters are open to all members who are willing to commit to watching the eligible films. Special Award recipients are selected by the Film Committee. For full details of the voting process, please visit: www.bafta.org/film/awards
Film Finances congratulates all this year’s BAFTA Nominees and is proud to have been the Completion Guarantor of Blade Runner 2049 I, Tonya, Jawbone Molly’s Game Phantom Thread Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri Wonder
Film Finances, world leader in the provision of Completion Guarantees For the Film and Television Industry since 1950
ENHANCE
MOMENTS
Tastefully Italian
sanpellegrino.com
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C A L L M E BY YO U R N A M E WO R DS BY M AT T H E W T U R N ER
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B EST FI L M N O M I N EES Emilie Georges, Luca Guadagnino, Marco Morabito, Peter Spears
OT H ER N O M I N AT ED C AT EG O R I ES Adapted Screenplay, Director, Leading Actor
arly on in Luca Guadagnino’s exquisitely romantic sexual awakening drama, Michael Stuhlbarg’s professor of archaeology observes a piece of sculpture and remarks, “There’s not a straight line in any of these statues; they’re all curved, as if daring you to desire them.” These themes of desire and playfulness are central to Guadagnino’s film, an achingly tender portrait of first love that has every element working in perfect harmony. Set ‘somewhere in northern Italy’ in 1983, the film depicts the burgeoning relationship between 17-year-old Elio (Timothée Chalamet) and 24-year-old graduate student Oliver (Armie Hammer), who’s been invited to the professor’s summer home to assist with his research. At first, Elio is irritated by Oliver (not least because he has to give up his bedroom), but his disdain quickly transforms into erotic obsession and he’s thrilled to discover that his feelings are reciprocated. Adapted from André Aciman’s 2007 coming-of-age/coming out novel by screenwriter and producer James Ivory, Guadagnino’s film
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THIS IS AN INTENSELY SENSUAL FILM THATÕS FULLY ALIVE TO THE PLEASURES OF LIFE.
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perfectly captures the intoxicating rush of first love, from the thrill of casual physical contact to the tantalising possibilities of flirtatious conversation and the deathly sharp pangs of heartache and jealousy. The director’s masterful choreography of the flirtation scenes is just one of the film’s many delights – think of the images of the pair weaving towards and away from the camera on their frequent bike rides; or the wide shot scene at the Battle of the Piave monument on a piazza, the out-of-shot characters circling the statue and coming closer together, just as their still-coded conversation finally confirms their mutual attraction. It’s not just the love story that captivates, however. This is an intensely sensual film that’s fully alive to the pleasures of life. Guadagnino’s transportive direction allows you to experience each and every one of them, from the warm Italian sunlight on your face to the buzz of the insects in the summer haze to the indulgent taste of ripe fruit. In the film’s most amusingly outrageous scene, this last artifice is taken to deliriously sensual
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heights with a sequence involving the erotic use of a peach that would make even Philip Roth blush. (If there was an award for 2017’s Best Prop, that peach would win hands down.) On top of everything else, Guadagnino has cast the film to perfection. Relative newcomer Chalamet is simply mesmerising as Elio, conveying complex, powerful emotion with his expressive eyes and body language and generating palpable chemistry with his co-star. Similarly, Hammer (who continues to make interesting choices) delivers perhaps his best performance to date, dialing his all-American golden boy charisma up to 11 and putting his chiselled physicality to crowd-pleasing effect, cheerfully spending the entire movie in a pair of tiny shorts. Stuhlbarg is equally wonderful as Elio’s dad, delivering a heartfelt, compassionate fatherson speech towards the end of the film that limbers up the tear ducts just in time for Guadagnino’s devastating final shot, a heart-breaking close-up of Elio’s face that’s destined to go down as one of the all-time great film endings. • Matthew Turner is a freelance film journalist and the critic for iNews
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N Zealan New Z d’s Most M Awarded r Wine rded W ry r
Full-bodied, with distinct undertones of independence. When you’re independent, you get to decide your own path and follow your dreams. This means that we can give free rein to our creativity, because whether in the world of film or wine, that’s when the magic happens. For us, it’s about choosing only what is good enough for our family and friends. See for yourself, next time you open a bottle of Villa Maria.
OPEN ANOTHER WORLD
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George Villa Maria Founder, Owner
CELEBRATING OUR 10TH YEAR OF PARTNERSHIP WITH BAFTA4 6
DA RKEST HOUR WO R DS BY N EI L S M I T H
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oe Wright’s Darkest Hour is not the only Best Film nominee at this year’s Awards to involve Operation Dynamo, the mass evacuation of more than 330,000 British and Allied troops from French soil in MayJune 1940. Nor is it the only Joe Wright film to feature this pivotal World War II episode, the director having already taken us to Dunkirk in Atonement (2007), winner of the Best Film BAFTA in 2008. And it is certainly not the first work to have an actor portray Winston Churchill and be BAFTAnominated as a result (Simon Ward was shortlisted for Most Promising Newcomer for Young Winston, while John Lithgow was recognised for playing Churchill in The Crown as recently as last year). Faced with a mountain of familiarity, though, Wright and his team set out to conquer it anew. Beginning on 9 May 1940 and ending on 4 June, Darkest Hour imagines the early days of Churchill’s first prime ministership as a taut political thriller, with the newly installed PM facing opposition to his ‘fight on’ policy from his party, his king and an appeasement-seeking War Cabinet. Rather than taking us again to the beaches of Dunkirk, Wright takes us into the Houses of Parliament, the Cabinet War Rooms and even the London Underground: shadowy, crepuscular places that mirror the dire situation facing Britain and its allies. In Gary Oldman, meanwhile, it has a Churchill who is flawed, self-doubting and only too human: a tetchy, sly and combative soul who can bring the Commons to its feet with his inspirational oratory yet can’t coax a cat out from under his bed at Chartwell.
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B EST FI L M N O M I N EES Tim Bevan, Lisa Bruce, Eric Fellner, Anthony McCarten, Douglas Urbanski
OT H ER N O M I N AT ED C AT EG O R I ES Cinematography, Costume Design, Leading Actor, Make Up & Hair, Original Music, Outstanding British Film, Production Design, Supporting Actress
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Oldman’s Churchill is one for the ages and marks another career highpoint for an actor who already has indelible portrayals of Joe Orton, Sid Vicious and Lee Harvey Oswald under his belt. His, though, is not the only performance of note in a film that also boasts Dame Kristin Scott Thomas conveying empathy and compassion as his loyal spouse, Clemmie; Australia’s Ben Mendelsohn emoting regal unease as George VI; and Stephen Dillane making a scarily credible case for peace talks as the wily Viscount Halifax. Credit should go to Lily James as well for the way she nurtures Churchill’s secretary Elizabeth Layton from nervous novice to invaluable helpmate, and to Ronald Pickup for bringing a crumpled, embattled dignity to
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GARY OLDMANÕS CHURCHILL IS FLAWED, SELFDOUBTING AND ONLY TOO HUMAN: A TETCHY, SLY AND COMBATIVE SOUL.
the ailing Neville Chamberlain, a role originally intended for the late Sir John Hurt. Much has been and will be written on the astounding make up wizardry that aided Oldman’s central transformation. Yet, Darkest Hour also deserves plaudits for its masterful production design, Bruno Delbonnel’s prowling cinematography and a score from Dario Marianelli that prickles with urgency and tension. At one point in the story, screenwriter Anthony McCarten has Churchill and his family make an irreverent toast, “To not buggering it up”. It goes without saying that there is no buggering up in a riveting drama that makes the events of 78 years ago feel as relevant as this morning’s headlines. • Neil Smith is a contributing editor of Total Film magazine
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WARNER BROS. PICTURES WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE
BRITISH ACADEMY OF FILM AND TELEVISION ARTS AND PROUDLY CONGRATULATE OUR NOMINEES
BEST FILM
EMMA THOMAS, p.g.a. CHRISTOPHER NOLAN, p.g.a.
SOUND
RICHARD KING GREGG LANDAKER GARY A. RIZZO ALEX GIBSON MARK WEINGARTEN
DIRECTOR
CHRISTOPHER NOLAN
CINEMATOGRAPHY
HOYTE VAN HOYTEMA, ASC, FSF, NSC
EDITING
LEE SMITH, ACE
PRODUCTION DESIGN NATHAN CROWLEY GARY FETTIS
W W W.W A R N E R B R O S 2 0 1 7. C O M
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ORIGINAL MUSIC HANS ZIMMER
SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS ANDREW JACKSON SCOTT FISHER PAUL CORBOULD ANDREW LOCKLEY
DUNKIRK WO R DS BY CH R IST I N A N E WL A N D
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B EST FI L M N O M I N EES Christopher Nolan, Emma Thomas
OT H ER N O M I N AT ED C AT EG O R I ES Cinematography, Director, Editing, Original Music, Production Design, Sound, Special Visual Effects
n the summer of 1940, an embattled, plucky Britain faces the thundering might of potential Nazi invasion. Trapped on the beaches at Dunkirk and awaiting rescue, some 330,000 British and Allied troops do what they can to stave off death by air or sea. Among them, a young British Army private (Fionn Whitehead) desperately searches for any means to cross the Channel, a constant target for German torpedoes and the Luftwaffe. As the boys on land try to escape, the RAF pilots in the air (Tom Hardy and Jack Lowden) do their best to protect them, often to little success. Meanwhile, some courageous British civilians (Mark Rylance, Barry Keoghan) sail their small vessel across the channel to see if they can offer some help. Using a triptych structure to tell the Dunkirk evacuation story by land, sea and air (also known as Operation Dynamo), Christopher Nolan applies a deeply modern approach to the most classical of subjects. With its incremental time slippages and pummelling, near-constant momentum, Dunkirk bears little resemblance to Second World War films of times past. With Hans Zimmer’s dissonant, nerve-shredding soundtrack ticking away in the background, the effect is overwhelming and immersive. Nolan’s approach to characterisation is also unusual – his subjects are frequently wordless and archetypal, plucked seemingly at random from the hundreds of
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DUNKI RK thousands of individuals surrounding them. The simple humanity of their ordeal is highlighted by the lack of specificity; there’s a sense that these young men are strangers to us but we are nonetheless compelled by their fight for survival. If there was any doubt that something novel could be done with the subject and genre, Nolan soon banishes it. This is the first feature film to use handheld IMAX cameras, and one of very few to be so predominately filmed on 65mm. Made in natural light, there’s a remarkable tactility to Dunkirk – real vintage bombers and creaking warships of the era were a must for the filmmaker, with CGI avoided wherever possible. The film’s clever combination of physical effects and technological modernity amount to what is ultimately an old-fashioned story: one of underdog glory. But Dunkirk is also a trying – even traumatising –
THESE YOUNG MEN ARE STRANGERS TO US BUT WE ARE NONETHELESS COMPELLED BY THEIR FIGHT FOR SURVIVAL.
viewing experience. The sensory and emotional barrage is relentless. Men line up on a pier in a vast column of olive drab and steel helmets; heads tilting upward one by one in slow horror as a German plane descends. Splinters and seafoam fly. Machine guns strafe and warplanes arrive with a menacing high-pitched whine. Water rushes into the side of a damaged warship like a Biblical flood, tossing the soldiers around like ragdolls. ‘Spectacle’ might seem like a dirty word these days, but Dunkirk proves that spectacle can exist in its finest sense. Here, Nolan uses it in service of illuminating this desperate, harrowing moment in 20th century history. • Christina Newland is a freelance journalist on film and culture for The Guardian, Sight & Sound and Little White Lies magazine
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KARLIE KLOSS
I N S P I R E D BY N AT U R E, C R A F T E D BY S WA ROVS K I
ATELIERSWAROVSKI.COM
T H E S H A P E O F WAT ER WO R DS BY CL A R IS SE LO U G H R E Y
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oneliness is an odd, dreadful curse: a cruel joke that can leave someone feeling utterly abandoned in the middle of a crowded room. It descends like a dreary haze on the inhabitants of Guillermo del Toro’s The Shape of Water, their souls chained down as if they were trapped at the bottom of the ocean. An image conjured thanks to Dan Laustsen’s murky, dreamy cinematography, partnered with Alexandre Desplat’s twinkling score, which strikes like sunbeams breaking through the surface. To del Toro, loneliness isn’t always about physical isolation, it can feel like speaking a language no one else understands. A fact more literally true of the film’s mute heroine Elisa, “a princess without a voice”, delivered to screen with aching passion by Sally Hawkins. Her each gesture vibrates with the potency of a thousand words, but they’re largely lost on those around her. She feels lonely because she cannot speak, but so does her friend Zelda (Octavia Spencer), despite filling their days cleaning the halls of a secretive laboratory with nothing but words, only to return home to a husband who barely acknowledges her existence. Their overseer (Michael Shannon), a brash individual, may possess the picture perfect family and a brand new Cadillac, but those things could
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THE LANGUAGE OF LOVE [IS] SO MYSTICAL, SO OVERWHELMING, IT FEELS CONCEIVABLE ONLY THROUGH DREAMS, FAIRY TALES AND THE SILVER SCREEN. never possibly fill the aching void that constitutes unfulfilled ambition. He is a monster created out of loneliness, feverishly convinced his own brutality will pave the way to power – and to a sense of rightful place. A scientist (Michael Stuhlbarg), too, feels isolated, but here by his own dedication to a cause that ultimately fails to believe in him. Elisa’s neighbour (Richard Jenkins), meanwhile, is outright rejected by the world due to his sexuality. But within these dark caverns, something grows. A strange attraction,
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shared so unexpectedly between Elisa and the aquatic creature (Doug Jones) held captive as the laboratory’s latest experiment. They may not speak each other’s language, but their communication transcends words: it is the language of love. One so mystical, so overwhelming, that it feels conceivable only through dreams, fairy tales and the silver screen. How else could Elisa comprehend such vast emotions? How else could she communicate them, other than with the vocabulary she learnt inside the darkened cinema located right below her own apartment? She has no choice but to take those cues, culminating in the film’s romantic peak: a fantasy sequence in which she sings “You’ll Never Know” from 1943’s Hello, Frisco, Hello, her and her creature swirling on a black-and-white soundstage like Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire reborn. Cinema’s own beguiling language has a way of communicating things that feel beyond individual B EST FI L M N O M I N EES words, or individual thoughts. It becomes a force, Guillermo del Toro, J Miles Dale one that radiates out from screen to audience. Elisa’s love has its own aura; people are drawn to its OT H ER N O M I N AT ED magnitude, are compelled to protect it and, in a way, C AT EG O R I ES are restored themselves by it. Certainly, The Shape of Cinematography, Costume Design, Director, Water – the most beautiful, pure and open-hearted of Editing, Leading Actress, Original Music, love stories – itself possesses that power. • Original Screenplay, Production Design, Sound, Special Visual Effects, Supporting Actress
Clarisse Loughrey is a film journalist for The Independent
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THREE BILLBOA RDS OUTSIDE EBBING, M ISSOURI WO R DS BY CH A R LOT T E OÕSU L L I VA N 5 9
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t’s an anomaly. Unlike the other contenders in the Best Film category, this effort from London-Irish writer-director Martin McDonagh is set in the here and now. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri is topical, too, chiming as it does with the #MeToo moment. A hilarious black comedy about misogyny (as well as racism, homophobia, xenophobia, class prejudice, and, last but not least, heightism), it boasts an American protagonist who’s sick of toxic males. In the words of Mildred Hayes (played by Frances McDormand), “This time, the chick ain’t losing.” For Mildred, it’s a crime that, seven months after the rape and murder of her teenage daughter, no one’s been caught. So, she advertises the fact that Ebbing’s chief of police, Willoughby (Woody Harrelson), is clueless. Which, because Willoughby is dying, causes outrage. Particularly vexed is Willoughby’s redneck deputy, Dixon (Sam Rockwell), who starts to treat whistle-blowing Mildred as public enemy number one. It’s tempting to dwell on the moments where Mildred lets rip. Like her savaging of a Catholic priest, which involves the verbal curveball of the decade. Or the visceral sequence where she succumbs to ‘drill rage’. As for her fire-bombing skills... if Mildred was a movie, she’d be Apocalypse Now. Yet, it’s when Mildred lets down her guard, ironically, that McDormand does her best work. During a conversation with Willoughby (and, later, a deer) Mildred’s voice is so laced with love it makes you dizzy. The scene where she explains the method behind her madness (she’s actually running with an idea suggested by the ‘guidebooks’) is equally wrenching. When Mildred’s eyes widen, she looks as gullible, and eager to please, as a child.
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B EST FI L M N O M I N EES Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin, Martin McDonagh
OT H ER N O M I N AT ED C AT EG O R I ES Cinematography, Director, Editing, Leading Actress, Original Screenplay, Outstanding British Film, Supporting Actor (x2)
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McDormand is hardly a secret weapon, but not since Fargo has she seemed so galvanised. And Rockwell, somehow, keeps up. That Mildred and Dixon come to an understanding makes sense, not least because the pair seem separated at birth. All cheekbones and overbite, they resemble raddled chipmunks. Beautiful, raddled chipmunks. Meanwhile, Peter Dinklage is a joy as James, the only man in Ebbing smart enough to realise that Mildred is hot. Though James isn’t integral to the plot, Dinklage (sporting crestfallen eyes and a humongous moustache) is crucial to the mix. It’s still rare for a male star to be romantically linked, on screen, with an actress older than himself, but Dinklage (as in The Station Agent) breaks the mould with style. If you find cussing painful (or, indeed, jokey references to “retards”), you will be in need of liquid morphine
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MILDREDÕS SAVAGING OF A CATHOLIC PRIEST INVOLVES THE VERBAL CURVEBALL OF THE DECADE.
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by the time the credits roll. Others will grimace during the upbeat third act (practically an advertisement for the all-new, diversity-friendly South). Many brilliant writer-directors have shown guilt-ridden parents reacting, furiously, to the death of a child (see Andrea Arnold’s Red Road or Kenneth Lonergan’s Manchester by the Sea). What’s different about McDonagh’s project is that it’s determined to be fun. Mildred is fond of the word “betwixt”. Betwixt you and me, this film is destined to provoke rows. But that’s OK. The right to take umbrage. That’s what Three Billboards is all about. • Charlotte O’Sullivan is a film critic for the Evening Standard
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SIR RIDLEY S COT T T H E FEL LOWS H I P Words by Rosie Fletcher Portrait by Gavin Bond/BAFTA
• Stills courtesy of BFI
ir Ridley Scott is a self-confessed workaholic and he has no plans to slow down anytime soon. At age 80, he’s already created a legacy that will be part of cinematic history forever – giving us images, moments and characters that have defined and shaped the landscape of film, from the slow-burn terror and iconic feminist hero of Alien (1979), the stunning skylines of Blade Runner (1982), Thelma and Louise’s (1991) heartbreaking and uplifting heroes’ ending to Maximus Decimus Meridius’ rousing “father to a dead son” speech in Gladiator (2000). Versatile, outspoken, comfortable traversing genres and budgets, Scott has set up two companies, won numerous awards, been given a knighthood and made some of the most important films of the last 40 years. But he insists the best could be yet to come. Ask him about how he would define his career to date and he’s not looking back. “I’d like to have done 60 movies. I’m heading towards my 30th,” he says. “I’m a chronic worker. I love it.” Scott was fascinated with film from an early age, spending most of his weekends in local cinemas watching black and white Hollywood classics. But growing up mostly in the north east of Britain at a time before film schools existed meant he had to forge his own path into an industry he didn’t really understand. “I had no idea what a director was or how you’d even get to become a director,” he says. “There were not a lot of films happening in England at the time when I was a real youngster, it was as distant as going to Mars.” Instead Scott, artistic and talented at drawing, set his sights on becoming an ‘art director’ after seeing the job title listed in the credits of those weekend movies.
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In 1958, Scott went to the Royal College of Art to study Graphic Design where he managed to borrow its one camera (a Bolex wind-up clockwork model) and made his first 20-minute short, Boy and Bicycle. “That was the beginning,” he says. “It was a DIY process of saying, ‘Gosh, I really like this, now how do I get to do this as a living?’” This is what Scott is like: a determined self-starter who still prides himself on delivering on-time and under budget. His is a career built on creativity, graft and excellent business sense. Out of college and Scott became a trainee set designer with the BBC before moving into advertising and television. “It was the golden age of British advertising with commercials almost treated
Right: The Martian (2015) Below left: Gladiator (2000) Bottom left: Thelma & Louise (1991) Bottom right: Blade Runner (1982)
like an art form. We were the English Mad Men,” he recalls – indeed Scott’s Hovis ad, featuring another boy and a bicycle and accompanied by Dvorak’s New World Symphony, is still iconic. Scott set up his own company, Ridley Scott Associates (RSA), with his director brother Tony – RSA turns 50 this year – before eventually making his feature directorial debut with The Duellists (1977), aged 40. The film was a critical hit, winning the Jury prize for best first work in Cannes, though it didn’t score big at the box office. “Who would want to see a film about the Napoleonic armies? Way too arty!” Scott reflects. However, The Duellists earned two BAFTA nominations – for Costume Design and Cinematography. The film didn’t win either at the time but Scott seems to enjoy the symmetry of being awarding the Fellowship now four decades later. “Well, you know, it’s taken a while!” he laughs. “It’s great to be acknowledged
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by your peers, that’s very important. I’m thrilled to bits actually.” Scott has always been happy juggling awards fare with blockbusters. In the last year alone he brought us a big budget franchise sequel, Alien: Covenant, as well as true life JP Getty drama, All The Money in the World, which has earned more BAFTA love for its star Christopher Plummer. A massive fan of Star Wars (“It blew me out of the water and I was depressed for two months!”), Scott began his love affair with science fiction with Alien, which was a huge commercial and critical hit, and then Blade Runner, which became a genre classic. That both franchises are still going in 2018 is testament to Scott’s ability to create timeless stories that resonate with audiences of all ages across the decades.
FELLOW SHI P
ÒAS DIRECTOR, YOU ARE THE CHEERLEADER, YOU ARE THE FATHER FIGURE, YOU ARE THE ADVISOR, YOU ARE THE PSYCHOLOGIST, YOUÕRE ALSO AN EXPERT ON BOOTLACES AND HAIRCUTS.Ó Thelma & Louise gave Scott his first Best Director Oscar and BAFTA nominations, followed by more for Gladiator, and later an Oscar nomination for Black Hawk Down (2001). More BAFTA recognition came in 1995 when the Scott brothers were together celebrated for their Outstanding British Contribution To Cinema (shortly after their purchase of an ailing Shepperton Studios); then his knighthood came in 2003. An expert storyteller with an incredible visual eye, Scott says the most important thing he’s learned throughout his career is the importance of hard work.
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Above: All the Money in the World (2017) Right: G.I. Jane (1997)
“A lot of the job of a director is about mental and physical stamina. You need both,” he says. “If you don’t, one way or another, one of them is going to get you. You are the cheerleader, you are the father figure, you are the advisor, you are ÒITÕS GREAT TO BE the psychologist, you’re also an expert on bootlaces and haircuts. So, if you don’t like ACKNOWLEDGED BY YOUR pressure, don’t do the job!” PEERS, THATÕS VERY IMPORTANT. No kidding. In 1980, Scott set up production company Percy Main IÕM THRILLED TO BITS ACTUALLY.Ó Productions, with Tony Scott. This transformed into Scott Free Productions in 1995 and the company has produced scores of films and television shows since, with many more in development. Scott’s own projects under the Scott Free banner have included crime dramas such as 2007’s American Gangster (which earned a Best Film BAFTA nomination in 2008) and Body of Lies (2008), sword and sandal epics Kingdom of Heaven (2005) and Exodus: Gods and Kings (2014), as well as more smart science fiction fare in Alien prequel, of sorts, Prometheus (2012), and The Martian (2015), the latter earning his most recent BAFTA nomination for Director. Meanwhile, Scott Free and Scott himself are attached to dozens more potential projects.
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S ON Y PIC T U RE S REL E A SING ( U K ) is proud to congratulate
SIR RIDLEY SCOTT recipient of
THE BAFTA FELLOWSHIP
www.sonypictures.co.uk
© 2018 Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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It’s an extraordinary body of work from one of the greatest and most influential filmmakers working today. Ask Scott if he has one defining moment, though, in a career so far so epic, and it’s a personal memory from years ago, way before he took us to new worlds and ancient civilisations. “Standing on a beach in Redcar with my younger brother and a little clockwork camera. I’m standing in the morning and it’s freezing cold and I’m saying, ‘Right, what we’re going to do is make this movie’,” he reminisces. “That’s still the biggest moment for me.” •
SELECT FILMOGRAPHY AS DIRECTOR
2017 All the Money in the World 2017 Alien: Covenant 2015 The Martian 2014 Exodus: Gods and Kings 2013 The Counsellor 2012 Prometheus 2010 Robin Hood 2008 Body of Lies 2007 American Gangster 2006 A Good Year 2005 Kingdom of Heaven 2003 Matchstick Men 2001 Black Hawk Down 2001 Hannibal 2000 Gladiator 1997 G.I. Jane 1996 White Squall 1992 1492: Conquest of Paradise 1991 Thelma & Louise 1989 Black Rain 1987 Someone to Watch Over Me 1985 Legend 1982 Blade Runner 1979 Alien 1977 The Duellists
Rosie Fletcher is Movies Editor at Digital Spy
B A F TA AWA R D S & N O M I N AT I O N S
1995 Outstanding British Contribution
to Cinema, with Tony Scott 1992 Special Award 2016 Director nomination, The Martian 2008 Best Film nomination, American
Gangster, with Brian Grazer 2001 Direction nomination, Gladiator 1992 Best Film nomination,
Thelma & Louise, with Mimi Polk 1992 Direction nomination,
Thelma & Louise
Left: Behind the scenes on Alien (1979)
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‘Exodus: Gods and Kings’ © 2014 Twentieth Century Fox. All rights reserved.
PINEWOOD WARMLY CONGRATULATES OUR FRIEND AND LONGSTANDING ASSOCIATE
RIDLEY SCOTT
ON RECEIVING THE BAFTA FELLOWSHIP www.pinewoodgroup.com 6 9
FELLOWS
O F
THE
1971 Alfred Hitchcock 1972 Freddie Young obe 1973 Grace Wyndham Goldie 1974 David Lean 1975 Jacques Cousteau 1976 Sir Charles Chaplin 1976 Lord Olivier 1977 Sir Denis Forman 1978 Fred Zinnemann 1979 Lord Grade 1979 Sir Huw Wheldon 1980 David Attenborough cbe 1980 John Huston 1981 Abel Gance 1981 Michael Powell 1981 Emeric Pressburger 1982 Andrzej Wajda 1983 Sir Richard Attenborough cbe 1984 Sir Hugh Greene 1984 Sam Spiegel 1985 Jeremy Isaacs 1986 Steven Spielberg 1987 Federico Fellini 1988 Ingmar Bergman 1989 Sir Alec Guinness ch, cbe 1990 Paul Fox 1991 Louis Malle 1992 Sir John Gielgud 1992 David Plowright 1993 Sydney Samuelson cbe 1993 Colin Young cbe 1994 Michael Grade cbe 1995 Billy Wilder 1996 Jeanne Moreau 1996 Ronald Neame cbe 1996 John Schlesinger cbe 1996 Dame Maggie Smith 1997 Woody Allen 1997 Steven Bochco 1997 Julie Christie 1997 Oswald Morris obe 1997 Harold Pinter cbe 1997 David Rose 1998 Sean Connery 1998 Bill Cotton cbe 1999 Eric Morecambe & Ernie Wise 1999 Elizabeth Taylor
ACA DE MY
2000 Michael Caine 2000 Stanley Kubrick (posthumous) 2000 Peter Bazalgette 2001 Albert Finney 2001 John Thaw 2001 Dame Judi Dench 2002 Warren Beatty 2002 Merchant Ivory Productions 2002 Andrew Davies 2002 Sir John Mills 2003 Saul Zaentz 2003 David Jason 2004 John Boorman 2004 Roger Graef 2005 John Barry obe 2005 Sir David Frost obe 2006 Lord Puttnam cbe 2006 Ken Loach 2007 Anne V Coates obe 2007 Richard Curtis cbe 2007 Will Wright 2008 Sir Anthony Hopkins cbe 2008 Bruce Forsyth cbe 2009 Terry Gilliam 2009 Nolan Bushnell 2009 Dawn French & Jennifer Saunders 2010 Vanessa Redgrave cbe 2010 Shigeru Miyamoto 2010 Lord Bragg 2011 Sir Christopher Lee cbe 2011 Peter Molyneux obe 2011 Sir Trevor McDonald obe 2012 Martin Scorsese 2013 Sir Alan Parker 2013 Gabe Newell 2013 Michael Palin cbe 2014 Dame Helen Mirren 2014 Rockstar Games 2014 Julie Walters cbe 2015 Mike Leigh 2015 David Braben obe 2015 Jon Snow 2016 Sir Sidney Poitier 2016 John Carmack 2016 Ray Galton obe & Alan Simpson obe 2017 Mel Brooks 2017 Joanna Lumley obe
Names and honours correct at time of presentation. 7 0
PAUL EDMONDS LONDON IS PROUD TO BE THE OFFICIAL HAIR PARTNER TO THE EE BRITISH ACADEMY FILM AWARDS IN 2018
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THE NATIONAL FILM AND TELEVISION SCHOOL O U TS TA N D I N G B R I T I S H CO N T RI B U T I O N TO CI N E M A Words by Rich Matthews
• Images from NFTS, BAFTA/Guy Levy
any 47-year-olds, facing down the barrel of the big five-oh, have been prone to a little emotional wobble – the infamous mid-life crisis – questioning what they have done with their lives and whether they have achieved all that they had hoped. Thankfully, there’s no such existential angst hanging in the Beaconsfield studios of the National Film and Television School (NFTS), the UK’s top film, television and games production school, which is building towards its own half century in 2021. Just shy of that big birthday, the NFTS is being presented with this year’s Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema award, a testament and tribute to the school’s unerring ability to find, nurture and educate the finest UK talent for almost five decades. What’s the secret behind its robust 50 years in the industry? NFTS director Dr Jon Wardle believes it comes down to one, simple factor: adaptability. “When we started we were a film school; now we have television in our name,” Dr Wardle explains. “We also cover short form and streaming, and now we have games in the curriculum. Beyond our contribution to film, I love the idea that one day we’re making an outstanding contribution to games, the next to television. Whatever the new storytelling platforms are that come along, we produce the people who can tell the stories for that platform. Like with virtual reality, we’re not starting a silo-ed course; we’re working across all our disciplines to work out what VR truly means for each of them.” The National Film School (as it was first known) was originally co-founded in 1971 by the school’s first director Colin Young on the site of the Beaconsfield Film Studios, with an immediate vocational
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focus, offering more craft courses and specialisations than any of its competitors around the globe. Its focus on key specialisms, previously only the purview of studio apprenticeships and ‘learning on the job’, immediately saw the school gain national, then international recognition. It has trained the likes of Harry Potter and Fantastic Beasts director David Yates, We Need to Talk About Kevin filmmaker Lynne Ramsay, master cinematographer Roger Deakins and multi BAFTAwinning animator and creator of Wallace and Gromit, Nick Park – to name only a handful of its dozens of famed graduates. NFTS alumni have hauled in 10 Oscars and 49 nominations, and no less than 129 BAFTA wins between them. Today, the 20,000 square-foot campus boasts a 93 per cent graduate employment rate for its annual
ÒTHE NFTS HAS AN UNPARALLELED TRACK RECORD IN PRODUCING PEOPLE OF THE VERY HIGHEST QUALITY IN EVERY ROLE YOU CAN THINK OF.Ó
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turnover of 400-plus full-time students – with 600 more attending its range of short courses every year. With the creative industries bringing in upwards of £80bn a year to the UK economy, it’s the only British film school to be consistently ranked in The Hollywood Reporter’s top international film schools list. And, allegedly, you can even get a nice cup of tea in the canteen (which we all know is the real key to success in the UK film trade). Given the level of acclaim the school has garnered over the years and its lofty standing within the global film industry, it’s perhaps surprising to learn that receiving this kind of tribute from BAFTA still proved surprising and humbling for the school and its faculty. “I think it’s the first time it has been awarded to an educational institution,” says Wardle, “so to be recognised alongside filmmakers, companies and organisations that have made a
NF TS:
THE
FACTS
• More than 100 NFTS graduates were credited on 2017’s BAFTA and Academy Awards nominated films.
&
FI GURES
• NFTS students Khaled Gad (producer), Anushka Kishani Naanayakkara (director and co-writer) and Elena RuscombeKing (co-writer) won the British Short Animation BAFTA for A Love Story in 2017 (pictured below). It’s the fourth year in a row that the category has been won by NFTS students. A further 11 graduation films have gone on to win a BAFTA, either in the Short Film or Short Animation categories: Dreamland Express (in 1983); Careless Talk (1986); The Hill Farm (1989); The Candy Show (1990); A Grand Day Out (1990); Say Good-bye (1991); Balloon (1992); Until the River Runs Red (2011); Sleeping with the Fishes (2014); The Bigger Picture (2015); and Edmond (2016).
• The alum with the most BAFTA wins is animator Nick Park, who has eight BAFTAs to his name across all our Awards. • The school currently runs 18 MA courses, 14 Diplomas and four certificate courses, as well as various short courses. The most recent addition was an MA in Games Design and Development in 2012. • More than 43 per cent of its MA students are female and almost 17 per cent are from a black and mixed ethnic (BME) background. The school runs diversity schemes, including free directing workshops, to help increase the number of women and people from BME backgrounds working in screen directing. • NFTS alum and cinematographer Roger Deakins has been nominated for eight BAFTAs (not including this year’s nomination for Blade Runner 2049), winning three for The Man Who Wasn’t There (in 2002), No Country for Old Men (2008) and True Grit (2011). • Drowning Man, directed and produced by Directing Fiction graduate Mahdi Fleifel and edited by NFTS alum, Michael Aaglund, was one of just nine films selected from 4,843 submissions to compete for the Short Film Palme d’Or in 2017. • Films with NFTS graduate involvement grossed $11bn at the worldwide box office in 2016. • NFTS alum and filmmaker Lynne Ramsay was nominated for the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 2017 for her film You Were Never Really Here. It won two awards in total for Best Screenplay, for Ramsay, and Best Actor, for Joaquin Phoenix. Ramsay is a two-time BAFTA winner.
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• Together NFTS students and alumni have won an incredible 129 BAFTAs across the organisation’s numerous Awards. These include 20 wins at the Film Awards, 37 at the Television Awards, 19 at the Television Craft Awards, two at the Games Awards, 16 at the Children’s Awards and 21 at the BAFTA Cymru and BAFTA Scotland Awards. With thanks to the NFTS for their help in compiling these facts
significant contribution to the industry is really fantastic. Skills and talent are often secondary in people’s minds, so this is a welcome acknowledgement of the importance of what the staff and the graduates have achieved over the 47 years, and the indelible mark they’ve left on the industry.” From the beginning, the NFTS has focused on film’s true resource: people. “You need studios and equipment and all those kind of practical things, but in the end it comes down to writers, directors, producers, script supervisors,
T H E 2 018 F I L M A W A R D S N O M I N AT E D N F T S A L U M N I
• Aneil Karia, in British Short Film for Work • Dario Marianelli, in Original Music for Darkest Hour • Emily Morgan, in Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer for I Am Not a Witch • Fodhla Cronin O’Reilly, in Outstanding British Film and Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer for Lady Macbeth • Hugh Welchman, in Animated Film for Loving Vincent • Mahdi Fleifel, in British Short Film for A Drowning Man • Paloma Baeza and Ser En Low, in British Short Animation for Poles Apart • Roger Deakins, in Cinematography for Blade Runner 2049 • Stuart Wilson, in Sound for Star Wars: The Last Jedi
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gaffers…,” says Wardle. “The NFTS has an unparalleled track record in producing people of the very highest quality in every role you can think of. We offer training you can’t get anywhere else – there’s nowhere else in Europe where you can train to be a script supervisor or an assistant director. Nobody else is doing that.” With Brexit and its myriad unknowns just around the corner, Wardle thinks that UK talent development has never been more vital. He believes that the NFTS’s tradition of nurturing its students’ resilience and skill means it is primed and ready to pump out the top drawer behind-the-camera talent needed to maintain the current turnover of work being brought to the UK by the likes of HBO, Netflix and Amazon, let alone the major US film studios and their mammoth blockbuster productions. “My predecessor, Nik Powell [Wardle took over in 2017], used to say that if we were turning people out into the industry who weren’t as good as or better than the people who were already working then we’ve failed,” Wardle says. “Fortunately for us, the latest generation thinks about the industry differently. This creates opportunities for them that perhaps previous generations weren’t ready to take, future-proofing the industry through a group of people coming up who are happy to work in a different way, and move between areas, as part of the rich tapestry of freelance work. Our students are as excited about the release of series two of The Crown as they are about the release of
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ÒWHATEVER THE NEW STORYTELLING PLATFORMS ARE THAT COME ALONG, WE PRODUCE THE PEOPLE WHO CAN TELL THE STORIES FOR THAT PLATFORM.Ó
Battle of the Sexes in cinemas. They want to work across all of it. “We teach all students a few key things,” Wardle continues. “First, that it’s a collaborative business. That sounds really obvious but they don’t necessarily know that is a really important skill. “Second, in a world where lots of people think that you can go shoot a film and edit it, do sound and script supervise it yourself, all on your own because modes of production are so cheap, that the self-shooter is a myth. Having a specialism, being fantastic at it, then working out how you bring that together with other specialisms is key. The myth creates a culture of amateurism and people not really understanding modes of production in a way that will enable them to be successful. Our focus on craft, specialisation, and being really good at collaboration, combines with
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the next generation’s mindset of wanting to be involved in all forms of production to create quite a potent mix for the future.” We started this feature stating that turning 50 can cause some to wobble. But if its history is anything to go by, the NFTS’s 50th anniversary will reveal just how much of a rock the school has been in driving the success of British film, television and, most recently, games talent, on a global scale. There’s no doubt the coming years will showcase a whole new generation of outstanding creative practitioners. Mid-life crisis – what mid-life crisis? •
Find out more about the NFTS at www.nfts.co.uk or follow @NFTSFilmTV (Twitter/ Facebook/Instagram)
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F OR YOUR EY E S O N L Y A P H O TO G R A P H I C E S S A Y BY SA RA H LEE n 2015, photographer Sarah Lee was commissioned by BAFTA to officially document its Awards ceremonies over a period of a few years. Given unprecedented access, she was briefed to photograph whatever she wanted, however she liked, to capture the unique narrative of these extraordinary gala events. “It was a particularly lovely and open brief,” Lee says, “almost unheard of for a photographer.” Lee, whose work has been featured in the likes of TIME, Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair, chose to shoot the series in digital black and white with the aim of securing moments of semi-private intimacy and emotion in what is otherwise a very public forum. Over the next few pages, we feature a selection of these unguarded, playful and sometimes surreal moments, with commentary from the photographer herself.
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M I C H A E L FA S S B E N D E R & K AT E W I N S L E T
The Red Carpet, Film Awards 2016 (previous page)
Sarah Lee says: “I was lurking behind the branding boards in the press photography pit to take this. It feels otherworldly and has that ‘old Hollywood’ look I like. The reality is there are a 100-plus photographers pointing their cameras and shouting, many of whom later complained that I was in their shot. But visually, I love creating that classic Hollywood look. There was more mystique back then, I suppose, and I like playing around with that. And I like that she’s dominant and he has his head slightly bowed.”
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M I C H A E L FA S S B E N D E R
The Red Carpet, Film Awards 2016
“I very rarely shoot in black and white because I’m fascinated by colour and how that works in composition. But as soon as I got this commission, I knew I wanted to do it in black and white. There’s a huge amount of visual noise at the Awards and black and white is a very specific device to cut down on that noise and help put the focus on the people. Ideally, these images are all about intimacy in this very noisy, very public space.”
J O H N B OY E GA
The Red Carpet, Film Awards 2016
“One of the things I love about the BAFTA Awards is the interaction with the fans, it’s quite magical. I’m interested in trying to capture private-but-public moments and it all starts on the Red Carpet. The Red Carpet is like this incredibly genteel prison riot, with the fans all banging on the side and screaming names to get [the star’s] attention. It’s all really good-natured though. I wanted to get that feel of the drama of the Red Carpet. The selfie has a real importance to these fans. They get such pleasure from it. Every single face in this picture, including John Boyega’s, looks delighted.”
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E D D I E R E D M AY N E
The Red Carpet, Film Awards 2017
“Eddie looks so urbane and charming and cool in his Humphrey Bogart white dinner jacket, which is in contrast to the desperate shoving of fans thrusting memorabilia at him. As a photographer, I’m not concerned about whether someone’s famous or, because I’m shooting in black and white, what they’re wearing, even though I love how glamorous they all look. The fans all want that benediction of an acknowledgement or a handshake or a signature or a selfie. I’m amazed at how generous everyone is with their time.”
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C AT E B L A N C H E T T
The Red Carpet, Film Awards 2016
“I went low to take this. I was crouching and kind of scuffling backwards. There’s a movement to the Red Carpet, as the publicists or agents try to ensure their clients don’t get stuck somewhere too long. I was just trying to get a different perspective and angle. Not everyone photographs well from knee height, but Cate Blanchett looks radiant – her bone structure can withstand it.”
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ALICIA VIKANDER
The Auditorium, Film Awards 2016
“I don’t know who she’s hugging, but this was taken during that period where they are all catching up and talking before the ceremony begins. It surprised me when I first saw it, but it’s only natural. Often, they haven’t seen each other in a long time, so they’re all just chatting away. It’s almost like they’re on a school trip. It’s just so nice to see.”
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LEONARDO DICAPRIO
The Red Carpet, Film Awards 2016
“This sums up the big star Red Carpet experience. DiCaprio was in very good spirits, signing autographs and everything, but he had these enormous minders with him. I only work on Leica cameras, which are manual focus. This adds a technical challenge because it’s all moving so fast and is in low light. I think he’d noticed that I was walking backwards, desperately trying to focus my little camera while the minder in front ensured I didn’t get too close. There was a momentum pushing me backwards, which caught his eye. From DiCaprio’s expression, the joke’s on me.”
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CUBA GOODING JR
The Auditorium, Film Awards 2015
“He looks very much the movie star here, wearing sunglasses inside, even though it was dark in there. He was just sitting there, waiting for the show to begin. I think he knew he was being photographed though; I’d been spotted. What’s great is when people choose to give you the shot – he didn’t look away or anything like that, he found his light and turned up the intensity.”
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JULIANNE MOORE
The Auditorium, Film Awards 2015
“She was sitting in the front row and I had my camera bag on the floor between her and the stage. I bent down to change a lens and I heard this little yelp. I’d knelt on Julianne Moore’s foot. It was my first year working for BAFTA and I was horrified. But then I saw she was in this incredible light with her haunting, beautiful face and that powerful Garbo-esque stare. As I apologised, I was desperately trying to focus my lens. She just looked up and found her light. It looks like she’s glancing over at a friend, but I think that was her being very generous to a panicked photographer.”
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ROONEY MARA
The Auditorium, Film Awards 2016
“Rooney Mara was just having a quiet moment to herself while waiting for the show to start. Only the house lights were on at this moment, so it was very dim in there. Some people were sitting in terrible light, with awful shadows and impossible to photograph. And then some people, like Rooney, were in these little pools of beautiful light.”
M AT T H E W G O O D E
Backstage, Film Awards 2015
“Matthew was waiting outside Gavin Bond’s portraiture studio backstage, messing about on his vape after presenting an award, before heading back to his seat. His silhouette looked so good. His beautiful dinner jacket and bone structure makes this image work. I like that the vape-ring looks like a jelly fish.”
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ISABELLE HUPPERT
Backstage, The Green Room, Film Awards 2017
“Women in general are not overly keen on having someone lurk over their shoulder when they do their makeup, so I took this very carefully and quickly. I’m in complete awe of Isabelle Huppert. She looks magnificent, but it’s that look she’s giving herself that I particularly like, as if she’s appraising herself. I like the intimacy, and yet she looks a million dollars – Bacall-esque. I love that mixture of glamour, femininity and immense strength. It’s what I like about her and, in particular, about her here.”
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LÉ A SEYDOUX
Backstage, Film Awards 2015
“This was also by Gavin Bond’s studio. I was being a little cheeky shooting into the studio, but I couldn’t resist it. Léa Seydoux looks amazing in her fairy tale dress, but I love the cuff beckoning her – I think it’s her management. This moment feels so natural, with Léa worried about the train of her dress. There’s a dynamism to it. It’s rare that I use a flash, but I couldn’t have gotten it otherwise.”
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E M I LY B L U N T & S T A N L E Y T U C C I
The Stage Wings, Film Awards 2017
“This was in the wings. They were chatting to each other while waiting to present an award. They really looked like family nattering away [Tucci is Blunt’s brotherin-law]. It was a less guarded moment and the kind of thing you don’t get to see watching on television at home. I love being backstage and watching people take that huge breath before they step out in front of the world. It’s endlessly fascinating to me, seeing how people approach that moment of stepping into the light.”
D E V PAT E L & V I O L A DAV I S
Winners’ Photography, Onstage, Film Awards 2017
“This was just before the group winners photograph, taken after the ceremony has finished. This shot must be a BAFTA photography department headache, in the nicest possible way. Everyone is adrenalised, validated and delighted, so marshalling 100 faces to all look one way is an unenviable task. But for my purposes, it’s great – there’s an overwhelming air of delight all round.”
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THE AUDIENCE
The Auditorium, 2016
“This was taken on stage, just before the televised recording started. What surprised me was how the audience only really take their seats when the announcement has happened for the second or third time, usually a minute before the recording. I had to quickly run off stage as soon as it was done. I wanted to capture that sense of everyone sitting there in anticipation, waiting for the show to begin.�
ESSAY
CREDITS
Photographer Sarah Lee www.sarahmlee.com @sarahmlee47 BAFTA Photography Director Claire Rees Interview Toby Weidmann Venues The Royal Opera House and the Royal Albert Hall
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V ISI T T H E E X H I B I T I O N Most of the images in this essay, and many more taken by the photographer, will be on display at the Sarah Lee: Leica LA Exhibition from 23 February to 2 April at the Leica LA Gallery, 8783 Beverly Blvd, West Hollywood, California
OFFICIAL POSTPRODUCTION PARTNER TO BAFTA PROVIDING AWARDWINNING POSTPRODUCTION SINCE 1998
CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL OF THIS YEAR’S WINNERS AND NOMINEES
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Exterion Media, proud to be a supporter of the EE British Academy Film Awards in 2018 noel.nallen@exterionmedia.co.uk T: 020 7428 5544 @ExterionMediaUK
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www.exterionmedia.co.uk
IN M EMO R I AM The following pages honour the esteemed contribution to the film industry by those individuals who have sadly died in the last 12 months. To learn more about their many achievements, visit bafta.org/heritage/inmemoryof
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IN
M E MORIA M
J O H N G AV I L D S E N
RODNEY BEWES
BILL BUTLER
Director
Actor
Editor
21 December 1935 – 16 June 2017
27 November 1937 – 21 November 2017
16 October 1933 – 4 June 2017
MICHAEL BALLHAUS
BILL BLUNDEN
GLEN CAMPBELL
Cinematographer
Editor
Singer, Actor
5 August 1935 – 12 April 2017
3 December 1934 – 3 January 2018
22 April 1936 – 8 August 2017
KEITH BARRON
MANOLO BOLOGNINI
STEVE CHRISTIAN
Actor
Producer
Producer
8 August 1934 – 15 November 2017
26 October 1925 – 23 December 2017
14 December 1963 – 18 February 2017
T E R E N C E B AY L E R
MICHAEL BOND
CHRIS CORNELL
Actor
Writer
Singer, Songwriter
24 January 1930 – 2 August 2016
13 January 1926 – 27 June 2017
20 July 1964 – 18 May 2017
ANN BEACH
POWERS BOOTHE
PEG GY CUM M I NS
Actress
Actor
Actress
7 June 1938 – 9 March 2017
1 June 1948 – 14 May 2017
18 December 1925 – 29 December 2017
JOHN BERNECKER
BRENT BRISCOE
A N DY C U N N I N G H A M
Stunt Performer
Actor
Writer, Actor, Puppeteer
2 March 1984 – 13 July 2017
21 May 1961 – 18 October 2017
13 May 1950 – 5 June 2017
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IN
M E MORIA M
DANIELLE DARRIEUX
JOHN FORGEHAM
ROBERT GUILL AUME
Actress
Actor
Actor
1 May 1917 – 17 October 2017
14 May 1941 – 10 March 2017
30 November 1927 – 24 October 2017
FRED DE BR ADENY
C H A R L E S FR AT E R
J O H N N Y H A L LY D AY
Producer
Sound Recordist, Editor
Singer, Actor
22 July 1964 – 28 January 2017
21 January 1941 – 8 June 2017
15 June 1943 – 6 December 2017
J O N AT H A N D E M M E
ROBERT GETCHELL
R O B E R T H A R DY
Director, Producer, Writer
Writer
Actor
22 February 1944 – 26 April 2017
6 December 1936 – 21 October 2017
29 October 1925 – 3 August 2017
PETER DUFFELL
BOB GIVENS
MICHAEL HARM
Director
Animator
Location Manager
10 July 1922 – 12 December 2017
2 March 1918 – 14 December 2017
25 December 1965 – 19 January 2017
CHRISTIAN EISENBEISS
GERALD B GREENBERG
R I C H A R D H ATC H
Producer
Editor
Actor
11 September 1955 – 30 March 2017
29 July 1936 – 22 December 2017
21 May 1945 – 7 February 2017
PA M E L A E N G E L
BRAD GREY
G E O R G E H AW K E S
Film Distributor and Programmer
Producer
Technical Director, Film Processing
12 November 1934 – 15 July 2017
29 December 1957 – 14 May 2017
24 April 1924 – 10 June 2017
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IN
M E MORIA M
G L E N N E H E A D LY
SIR JOHN HURT
Actress
Actor
Actor
13 March 1955 – 8 June 2017
22 January 1940 – 25 January 2017
11 February 1941 – 17 August 2017
JOHN HEARD
CLIFTON JA MES
W A L T E R L A S S A L LY
Actor
Actor
Cinematographer
7 March 1946 – 21 July 2017
29 May 1920 – 15 April 2017
18 December 1926 – 23 October 2017
J O H N H E YM A N
SHASHI KAPOOR
ROSEM ARY LEACH
Producer
Actor, Producer
Actress
27 April 1933 – 9 June 2017
18 March 1938 – 4 December 2017
18 December 1935 – 21 October 2017
JOHN HILLERMAN
TERRENCE KELLEHER
SUZ ANNA LEIGH
Actor
Producer
Actress
20 December 1932 – 9 November 2017
2 July 1948 – 18 April 2017
26 July 1945 – 11 December 2017
GER ALD HIRSCHFELD
FR E D J KO E N E K A M P
J ERRY LEWIS
Cinematographer
Cinematographer
Actor, Producer, Director, Writer
25 April 1921 – 13 February 2017
11 November 1922 – 31 May 2017
16 March 1926 – 20 August 2017
TOBE HOOPER
M ARTIN L ANDAU
CHING LI
Director, Writer, Producer
Actor
Actress
25 January 1943 – 26 August 2017
20 June 1928 – 15 July 2017
29 October 1945 – 9 December 2017
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SONNY LANDHAM
IN
M E MORIA M
COLIN LOMA X
DINA MERRILL
SIR ROGER MOORE
Executive and Distributor
Actress
Actor
12 August 1961 – 28 December 2017
29 December 1923 – 22 May 2017
14 October 1927 – 23 May 2017
VICTOR LOWNES
R AY M E R R I N
JEANNE MOREAU
Producer
Re-recording Mixer
Actress
17 April 1928 – 11 January 2017
19 November 1937 – 15 January 2018
23 January 1928 – 31 July 2017
AL AN M ACDONALD
MARK MILSOME
CHARLIE MURPHY
Production Designer
Camera Operator
Actor, Writer
23 June 1956 – 30 August 2017
23 May 1963 – 18 November 2017
12 July 1959 – 12 April 2017
DOROTHY MALONE
JOHN MOLLO
HARUO NAKAJIMA
Actress
Costume Designer
Actor
30 January 1925 – 19 January 2018
18 March 1931 – 25 October 2017
1 January 1929 – 7 August 2017
TERENCE MARSH
Y VONNE MONL AUR
OMID NOOSHIN
Production Designer
Actress
Writer, Director, Producer
14 November 1931 – 9 January 2018
15 December 1939 – 18 April 2017
2 May 1974 – 15 January 2018
H E AT H E R M E N Z I E S
M ARY T YLER MOORE
BARRY N OR M AN
Actress
Actress
Film Critic
3 December 1949 – 24 December 2017
29 December 1936 – 25 January 2017
21 August 1933 – 30 June 2017
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k be
IN
M E MORIA M
M I C H A E L N YQV I S T
M O L LY P E T E R S
JEAN ROCHEFORT
Actor
Actress
Actor
8 November 1960 – 27 June 2017
15 March 1942 – 30 May 2017
29 April 1930 – 9 October 2017
PAT R I C K O ’C O N N E L L
T I M P I G OT T-S M I T H
Actor
Actor
Director, Writer, Producer
29 January 1934 – 10 August 2017
13 May 1946 – 7 April 2017
4 February 1940 – 16 July 2017
QUINN O’HAR A
STEVE PRICE
FR ANCO ROSSO
Actress
Sound Engineer, Music Recording Engineer
Director
3 January 1941 – 5 May 2017
17 February 1967 – 8 September 2017
obe
GEORGE A ROMERO
29 August 1941 – 9 December 2016
A N I TA PA L L E N B E R G
STEVE REEVIS
PETER SALLIS
Actress
Actor
Actor
6 April 1942 – 13 June 2017
14 August 1962 – 7 December 2017
1 February 1921 – 2 June 2017
M I C H A E L PA R K S
DON RICKLES
RICHARD SCHICKEL
Actor
Actor
Film Critic, Writer, Director
24 April 1940 – 9 May 2017
8 May 1926 – 6 April 2017
10 February 1933 – 18 February 2017
B I L L PA X T O N
E M M A N U E L L E R I VA
JA MES SHARKEY
Actor, Director
Actress
Agent
17 May 1955 – 25 February 2017
24 February 1927 – 27 January 2017
5 January 1930 – 13 October 2017
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IN
M E MORIA M
ALLISON SHEARMUR
STEVE TRUGLIA
ANNE WIAZEMSKY
Producer
Stunt Coordinator
Actress
23 October 1963 – 19 January 2018
3 October 1962 – 17 November 2016
14 May 1947 – 5 October 2017
S A M S H E PA R D
FR ANK VINCENT
JENNY WILKES
Actor, Writer
Actor, Producer
Director, Writer
5 November 1943 – 27 July 2017
4 August 1937 – 13 September 2017
1 August 1941 – November 2017
H A R RY D E A N S TA N TO N
NEER A J VOR A
HUGH WILSON
Actor, Musician
Actor, Writer, Director
Director, Writer, Producer
14 July 1926 – 15 September 2017
22 January 1963 – 14 December 2017
21 August 1943 – 14 January 2018
HARRY STR ADLI N G J R
M O R AY W A T S O N
ERIC ZUMBRUNNEN
Cinematographer
Actor
Editor
7 January 1925 – 17 October 2017
25 June 1928 – 2 May 2017
4 November 1964 – 1 August 2017
A N DY T H O M S O N
MICHAEL WEARING
Art Director
Producer
19 June 1969 – 27 January 2017
12 March 1939 – 5 May 2017
FR A N K T I DY
ADA M WEST
Cinematogropher
Actor
17 May 1932 – 27 January 2017
19 September 1928 – 9 June 2017
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The Academy has made every effort to compile an accurate In Memoriam listing of film practitioners between 15 January 2017 and 20 January 2018.
The BAFTA for best Special Visual Effects 2036 goes to... The next generation needs your support. To do this, we’ve launched an ambitious fundraising campaign to redevelop BAFTA’s home, 195 Piccadilly, and greatly enhance our charitable learning programmes. We believe talented individuals, from all backgrounds, should be given an equal chance to shine and receive the vital encouragement they need to succeed in our industries. To make a donation contact Andrew Overin, Head of Fundraising andrewo@bafta.org.
ILLUM INATING BA F TA
Building a brighter future for generations to come.
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Mudbound writer-director Dee Rees delivered a Screenwriting lecture at the British Museum
F OCUS ON F I L M hen the Awards season comes around, with all its wonderful hullabaloo, it’s easy to let the focus slip away from BAFTA’s other vital work to support, promote and develop the industry. We believe in the power of excellent films, games and television to creatively and culturally enrich the lives of everyone and so we work to share expert industry knowledge with a range of audiences, both industry and public, in the UK and overseas. Over the next few pages, we highlight some of BAFTA’s recent charitable activities, including a fantastic new photographic exhibition, our tentpole new talent events and initiatives, how we’re engaging with the public to enthuse them about film and its myriad facets, and what we’re doing to help not only level the playing field for talented wannabes but also make that playing field a safer place to be. This is just a small snapshot of the important work we do outside of our Awards all year round. So, please do take the time to visit our website to find out more, including how you can support our mission...
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FE M A L E FI RSTS E X H I B I T I O N The next photographic exhibition to be installed at our headquarters, BAFTA 195 Piccadilly, is titled ‘Female Firsts: Women Making BAFTA History’. Coinciding with the national centenary of the first women’s vote in the UK, we have selected more than 50 individuals who have made an invaluable contribution to film, games and television, as seen through the prism of BAFTA. The exhibition celebrates both them and their remarkable work through rare imagery, sourced from private collections, external libraries and BAFTA’s own photography archive. Women have played a key role in BAFTA from the earliest days of the Academy, with pioneering documentary filmmaker Jill Craigie joining its Council in 1950 – the only woman among 13 representatives. Things have changed since those days – BAFTA currently has a female chair, deputy chair, chief executive and vicepresident (for film) – but even so, women
remain underrepresented across numerous industry professions. While Female Firsts celebrates women’s priceless contribution to film, games and television, it also highlights the ongoing need to champion underrepresented groups within our industries. THE WINNERS ARE…
The Film Awards have evolved over the years, with the introduction of new categories and the retirement of others. Some categories celebrated female practitioners early on – Claire Bloom was the very first winner of Most Promising Newcomer (for Limelight) in 1953, for instance, while Margaret Furse collected British Costume Design (Colour) (Becket ) and Carmen Dillon won British Art Direction (Colour) (The Chalk Garden) in those categories’ inaugural year, 1965. A few years earlier, British Screenplay was won by Shelagh Delaney with co-writer Tony Richardson for A Taste of Honey in 1962, and actress Eva Green was the second ever person to win the publicly voted EE Rising Star award in 2007. Female directors have been celebrated in several of our debut awards, but it wasn’t until 2010 that Kathryn Bigelow made history by winning the Director category for The Hurt Locker; she remains one of only six female directors to be nominated in the category. The exhibition also celebrates the first female winners of Art Direction (Natasha Kroll, 1974), Editing (Dede Allen, 1976), Documentary ( Joan Churchill, 1982) and Adapted Screenplay (Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, 1984).
Top: Ruth Prawer Jhabvala receiving a Fellowship as part of the Merchant Ivory team in 2002. Middle: Kathryn Bigelow wins the Director category in 2010. Left: Dilys Powell receiving the Special Award in 1984. Opposite page: Natasha Kroll collects her BAFTA from president HRH Princess Anne in 1974
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THE SPECIAL ONES
Actress Vivien Leigh was the first woman to be presented with a Fellow certificate, at the British Film Academy Awards dinner in 1953. This was a very different, more academic honour than today’s Fellowship, with the recipient elected by existing Fellows and expected to deliver a lecture to members. It was retired in 1958, with the current annual Fellowship award introduced in 1971. As such, actresses Jeanne Moreau and Dame Maggie Smith were the first film-related Fellows of the Academy (both presented in 1996), although legendary television producer Grace Wyndham Goldie was the first woman to officially be presented with the award in 1973. The recipient of the Academy’s inaugural Special Award was journalist Dilys Powell in 1984, for her services to the art of film criticism. The organisation’s current second highest honour, the Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema, was presented to producer Joyce Herlihy in 2000, followed by casting director Mary Selway the next year. I N T E R N A L A F FA I R S
BAFTA’s first female (and longest serving) president was HRH Princess Anne (19722001), while Amanda Berry is our longest serving chief executive (2000-present, see box out). Television producer Hilary Bevan Jones became BAFTA’s first female chair in 2006. Finally, film producer Barbara Broccoli was made vice-president (for film) in 2016. Five of the 11 members of our Board of Trustees are women.
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A S CH I EF E X ECU T I VE, A M A N DA B ER RY, EN T ERS H ER 20 t h YE A R AT BA F TA , WE D ISCOVER H OW T H E O RGA N ISAT I O N H A S CH A N G ED U N D ER H ER ST E WA R DSH I P... What did you know about BAFTA before you started? It may sound a little corny, but I always aspired to be a BAFTA member. When I started in the industry, my first boss was a member and I hoped one day that I would be qualified enough to join, too. When I became a producer, I moved up to Scotland and joined BAFTA Scotland. I actually produced a number of BAFTA Awards ceremonies for ITV, so I got to know BAFTA well. I admired it as an organisation, so when the job of director of development and events was advertised in 1998, I knew I wanted to do it, even though it meant a pay cut and a move from Glasgow back to London. What do you think you brought to BAFTA? When I joined, there was a very small number of staff – around 15 or 20. There’s more than 100 of us now. The staff were incredibly dedicated, working hard to deliver numerous events, but financially the organisation wasn’t robust. Although incredible events were being delivered and the BAFTA brand was strong, ambitions for the organisation were understandably limited. I wanted us to be as ambitious as we possibly could, and one way we could achieve this was to bring in more commercial partners. There was a feeling at the time that it wasn’t right for BAFTA, but I believed that if we found the right partners – those who believed in BAFTA’s values – it would allow us to grow and develop our amazing activities and initiatives. We now work with 60 partners and each and every one of them helps us deliver our mission. I know this is a cliché, but in many ways it was about daring to dream.
How has BAFTA evolved since you started? I was very passionate about BAFTA, and I spent time working with the Board and committees to ensure that our relationships, and relevance, to the industry were incredibly strong. One of the major turning points was the Strategic Review in the mid-2000s. From that, it became very clear that our priority, as a charity, was for our work to benefit the public. We had our Awards, where we recognise excellence, signpost the films, games and television people should see and hopefully inspire them to explore further. But we could do so much more. Our public reach has grown, with people engaging with us beyond our Awards. In 2017, we reached 104 million people across our online channels. Our learning website, BAFTA Guru, offers inspiration and advice from BAFTA winners and nominees; we run a number of new talent initiatives – last year alone we identified 800 talented individuals, with more than 100 of them given bespoke support; we produce more than 250 events a year in the UK, LA, New York and Asia. More people are engaging with us than ever; some because they want to join the industry and some just because they’re film, games or television fans. How would you like to see BAFTA evolve in the future? We are constantly evolving. In the last few years, we’ve grown our activities and expanded internationally. We want to keep growing our reach with the public, and ensure that our industries are open to all. If you are talented and we can support you, we want to do that. That’s very important to us. We’re continuing to be involved in social change. Where we can identify a need in the industry, we are looking at what BAFTA’s role should be in that. Do you have a personal highlight? The BAFTA team. There are lots of things I am incredibly proud of, but if I had to pick one it would be the incredible team I work with at BAFTA. Finally, what makes our Awards so special? Our Awards are globally respected and we are showcasing an incredibly talented industry. Our British-ness makes us unique and we don’t shy away from celebrating that. Despite the February weather, people really enjoy coming to our Awards. •
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BA F TA EL E VAT E This new initiative was introduced in 2017, aimed at elevating individuals from underrepresented groups to the next stage of their career. The first group we chose to focus on was female directors, hoping to address the disparity between the malefemale ratio of film school graduates (50:50) and those subsequently employed in the industry (87:13). Fifteen experienced female directors were selected from almost 250 applicants to take part in this bespoke year-long programme, which included networking introductions, mentoring, tailored panel discussions, masterclasses and workshops. The BAFTA Elevate female directors programme is delivered in association with Pia Pressure, a production company that champions underrepresented filmmakers. T H E N E X T G EN ER AT I O N One of our tentpole initiatives of the past few years is Breakthrough Brits, which seeks to highlight talented individuals, who have already made a significant contribution to film, games and television and are looking to take that next step up the ladder. In 2017, 20 recipients, including two duos, were selected to enjoy the full support of BAFTA, in
B U L LY I N G & H A R A S S M E N T
It would be blinkered to say everything is fine within our industries, as the events of the past 12 months and the #MeToo campaign have demonstrated. It is BAFTA’s belief that everyone deserves to work in a safe environment, free from bullying, harassment and abuse. We have been working closely with the British Film Institute and 40 other industry organisations to develop a set of principles and guidance that can be adopted by the industry, which will be issued shortly. BFI CEO, Amanda Nevill, said: “The collective determination of so many of us, individuals and organisations, to make changes to create a better, safer environment for everyone working in film has been extraordinary. It speaks volumes about the positivity at the heart of our industry. It has been so rewarding for the BFI to work in partnership with BAFTA, BECTU, Equity, the Cinema and Television Benevolent Fund and many others, to jointly create a new set of principles and guidelines to eliminate bullying and harassment. Of course, there is more to be done, but I am optimistic because there is real energy behind the commitment to become the industry we really aspire to be, inclusive, fair, open and offering opportunity equally to everyone.”
partnership with Burberry, as they seek to progress their careers. The talented newcomers were selected by a jury of industry experts after a UK-wide open call for applications and nominations, and will receive one-to-one mentoring, an international travel bursary, guidance sessions and networking opportunities, as well as free access to BAFTA events, for 12 months. Every year, BAFTA awards scholarships to students in the UK, China, Los Angeles and New York. As part of our remit to support and nurture new talent, we provide financial assistance for students on a post-graduate course related to a career in film, games or television. There are a range of scholarships available, many including mentorship opportunities, access to BAFTA events throughout the year and a bursary. The scholarships are made possible by the generous support of a number of individuals, foundations and partnerships.
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Above: The new crop of UK and Chinese BAFTA scholars. Top Left: Southbank Centre’s artistic director, Jude Kelly, delivers the key note speech at a BAFTA Elevate event. Left: Four of this year’s 20 Breakthrough Brits
Left: One of the career development panels from BAFTA Guru 2017. Below: Director and producer Ron Howard offers advice at The Film Sessions in 2017
winners and nominees and are aimed at career starters and emerging talent. As well as being open to the public (with more than 3,500 tickets sold), 120 career starters (with six months to two years’ experience) were also selected to participate in Guru Labs in London. They were provided with a bespoke programme of round tables, one-to-ones and discussions tailored to their needs and careers. Digested podcasts of all the sessions are now available on our BAFTA Guru site. With 98 per cent of polled attendees rating their overall experience as ‘Good’, ‘Very Good’ or ‘Excellent’, Guru Live 2018 will be one of the must-attend events in the forthcoming BAFTA calendar. T H E CR A F T I N G TA B L E
L EC T U R ES & S CR EEN I N GS
Our Learning programme is underpinned by a commitment to sharing the expertise of BAFTA winners and nominees to the wider public. For us, The Film Sessions – a series of craft panels held the day before the Awards and featuring a selection of the incredible nominees – is a key way of putting this guiding principle into practice. This year’s sessions, held at BAFTA 195, on 17 February, marked the event’s seventh year, and featured sessions on costume design, production design and make up and hair. All sessions were filmed, alongside bespoke career interviews with the guests, with the footage made available on our learning website, BAFTA Guru. In May last year, BAFTA staged 45 events over two days in London and Glasgow for our second annual Guru Live. These panels, masterclasses and round tables feature BAFTA
BAFTA hosts a huge number of lectures, panels and Q&As throughout the course of the year all over the UK and internationally, either with experts in their field and/or BAFTA-winning or nominated talent. The recent Screenwriters series, held in November 2017 and supported by the JJ Charitable Trust, saw four internationally acclaimed writers delivering lectures about their craft: Mark Boal, Sean Baker, Dee Rees and Anthony McCarten. Founder of the series, Jeremy Brock, noted: “The talent and vision on display this year was breathtaking and unmissable... We celebrate
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OUR NEW HOST
Our new host of the Film Awards, Joanna Lumley, is also making BAFTA history. Several of our Awards have had female hosts in the past (including Esther Rantzen, Sue Lawley, Anna Ford and Ruby Wax), but Lumley is the first woman to host the Film Awards as its sole presenter.
all five of this year’s screenwriters in the knowledge that great films begin and end with a great screenplay.” The David Lean Lecture, supported by the David Lean Foundation, was delivered by Greek auteur, Yorgos Lanthimos, in February 2018. A master of absurdity and surrealist filmmaking, Lanthimos’ lecture provided an informative insight into his creative process and thoughts on the industry. BAFTA also plays host to numerous screenings throughout the year, often touring films around the country and beyond to provide a platform for new and established creators to showcase their work. A prime example is BAFTA Shorts, which collects together the nominated films from the British Short Film and British Short Animation categories. This year’s package started touring the UK on 6 February through an exclusive partnership with Curzon. The films have also been made available
on Curzon Home Cinema, the video-on-demand service, and later in the year the British Council will tour them in more than 100 countries, giving the filmmakers international exposure. Many of our short form nominees go on to greater fame, examples include Martin McDonagh (Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri), Sam Taylor-Johnson (Nowhere Boy), Joe Wright (Darkest Hour) and writer-director Rungano Nyoni, who was nominated for Short Film in 2012 (Mwansa the Great) and this year received an Outstanding Debut nomination (I Am Not a Witch). •
The Florida Project’s Sean Baker at the Screenwriters’ Lecture Series 2017
To find out more about all of the above events and activities, plus many more, including how you can help the next generation of talent, please visit: www.bafta.org
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As official scrutineers, when BAFTA needs our help we act. Providing them with confidence in the results during the awards season. It’s what we do that makes the difference. Many congratulations to all of tonight’s nominees and winners.
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OFFICERS
O F
THE
ACA DE MY
OFFICERS
COM M IT TEES
HRH The Duke of Cambridge, KG Academy President
ELECTED MEMBERS
Barbara Broccoli obe Vice President, Film
Marc Samuelson ‒ Chair Alison Thompson ‒ Deputy Chair Simon Chinn Noel Clarke Alexandra Ferguson Derbyshire * Gillian Hawser Pippa Markham Lynda Myles Andrew Orr David Thompson
OF THE FILM COMMITTEE
Greg Dyke Vice President, Television David Gardner obe Vice President, Games BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Jane Lush Chair of the Academy Dame Pippa Harris dbe Deputy Chair of the Academy
ELECTED MEMBERS OF THE TELEVISION COMMITTEE
Nick Button-Brown Chair, Games Committee
Krishnendu Majumdar ‒ Chair Hannah Wyatt ‒ Deputy Chair Richard Boden Laurence Marks Elizabeth McIntyre Emma Morgan Sara Putt Beryl Richards * Liz Trubridge Maxine Watson
Krishnendu Majumdar Chair, Television Committee Sara Putt Chair, Learning & New Talent Committee Marc Samuelson Chair, Film Committee Alison Thompson Deputy Chair, Film Committee Hannah Wyatt Deputy Chair, Television Committee
ELECTED MEMBERS OF THE GA MES COMMIT TEE
John Smith Chair, Finance and Audit Committee and Chair, Commercial Committee
Nick Button-Brown ‒ Chair Tara Saunders Lee Schuneman * Mike Simpson Jo Twist
Paul Morrell obe Co-optee Lloyd Dorfman Co-optee
*Children’s
Amanda Berry obe Chief Executive Kevin Price Chief Operating Officer
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Representatives
ASIA PACIFIC EUROPE MIDDLE EAST NORTH AMERICA
Creative ideas technical reality
Tel: +44 (0)1293 582000 | www.ct-group.com Digital
Display
Audio
Email: nmaag@ctlondon.com
Video
AD Events Ltd are especially proud to support BAFTA with the design and production of tonight’s dinner and after-party
T: +44(0) 20 7635 7372 E: enquiries@adevents.co.uk W: www.adevents.co.uk 1 1 8
PA RTNERS
O F
THE
ACA DE MY
BAFTA’s partners have shown great loyalty in their year-round association with the BAFTA brand, and share our commitment and passion for the industries we represent. We warmly thank them for their commitment to the Academy and our mission to support, develop and promote excellence in the film, television and games industries.
A C A D E MY PA RT N ERS Acqua Panna Audi UK Champagne Taittinger Hotel Chocolat S.Pellegrino Taylor Bloxham Villa Maria A C A D E MY S U P P O RT ERS Alpha Grip Barco Channel 4 CTV Outside Broadcast Deloitte Dolby The Farm Group Portaprompt Republic of Photography B A F TA C YM R U AB Acoustics Aberystwyth University Acqua Panna Audi UK BBC Cymru Wales Bluestone Buzz Magazine Capital Law Cardiff BID Cardiff & Vale College Champagne Taittinger Channel 4 Chapter Arts Centre Cineworld Cardiff Clarins Cuebox Curzon
Dà Mhìle Distillery The Social Club, Agency Deloitte DRESD ELP Galeri Caernarfon Genero Glyndwr University Gorilla Hotel Chocolat Iceland ITV Cymru Wales Ken Picton Mad Dog 2020 Media Access Solutions Mint Motion Pinewood Pontio Radisson Blu Hotel, Cardiff Rekorderlig S4C S.Pellegrino Sony UK Technology Centre St David’s Hall Sugar Creative Tiny Rebel Trosol University of South Wales University of Wales Trinity Saint David Villa Maria Welsh Government Working Word B A F TA S COT L A N D Acqua Panna Audi UK BBC Scotland Blue Parrot Company British Airways Champagne Taittinger
Channel 4 Cherry Blossom Cineworld Creative Scotland Deloitte Edit 123 The Galashan Trust Glenfiddich Grosvenor Cinema Hotel Chocolat M.A.C Cosmetics Material Works MCL Create Radisson Blu Hotel, Glasgow Rainbow Room International S.Pellegrino Skills Development Scotland Staropramen STV Taylor Bloxham Villa Maria Wire
The GREAT Britain Campaign Heineken The Hollywood Reporter Jaguar Land Rover Laika Mandarin Oriental Hyde Park London Mark Pigott Newegg Pinewood Studios Group Ruffino Screen International Swarovski VER The Wrap
B A F TA LOS A N G EL ES
B A F TA I N A S I A
Ace Hotel Los Angeles AFEX AKA Hotel Residences AMD American Airlines Bank Leumi BBC America British Film Commission Burberry Dana and Albert R Broccoli Charitable Foundation Deadline The Farm LA The Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverley Hills
Champagne Taittinger M·A·C Cosmetics Swarovski
B A F TA N E W YO R K HBO The Hollywood Reporter Retro Report Variety VisitBritain
For further information about partnership opportunities, please contact: Louise Robertson +44 (0)20 7292 5844 louiser@bafta.org
Natalie Moss +44 (0)20 7292 5846 nataliem@bafta.org
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FIL M
AWA RDS
PA RTNERS
With enduring thanks to all the official partners to the EE British Academy Film Awards in 2018.
P L A T I N U M T I E R PA R T N E R NESPRESSO
Co-Host ‒ Official Nominees’ Party
O F F I C I A L PA R T N E R S AC Q UA PA N N A
LANCÔME
Official Bottled Water
Official Beauty
AMERICAN
PAU L E D M O N D S
AIRLINES
LONDON
Official Airline
Official Hair Stylist
AT E L I E R
RÉ MY M ARTI N
S WA R OV S K I
Official Spirit
Official Jewellery AUDI
REPUBLIC OF
Official Car
PHOTOGR APHY
Official Photobooth BOT TLETOP
S.P E L L E G R I N O
Official Bag
Official Bottled Water
C H A M PAG N E
T H E S AVOY
TA I T T I N G E R
Official Hotel
Official Champagne D I G I TA L
T AY L O R B L O X H A M
CINEMA MEDIA
Official Cinema Media
Official Printer and Paper Supplier
EXTERION MEDIA
VILLA MARIA
Official Outdoor Media
Official Wine
H OT E L C H O C O L AT
Official Chocolate
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Official Bag Partner to the EE British Academy Film Awards
Welcoming you to the new BOTTLETOP flagship store at 84 Regent Street, London
#SUSTAINABLELUXURY bottletop.com 1 2 2
FIL M
AWA RDS
GIF T
PROVIDERS
NESPRESSO
A huge thanks to the following brands, which have generously provided gifts for this year’s nominees and citation readers.
The new Nespresso Lattissima One enables you to enjoy cappuccinos and lattes in your own home. www.nespresso.com
AT E L I E R S WA R OV S K I
PAU L E D M O N D S L O N D O N
A white lacquered metal crystalline ballpoint pen featuring 540 very delicate crystals. www.atelierswarovski.com
A luxury lifestyle collection of beautifully scented hand lotions and hand washes. pauledmonds.com
BOTTLETOP
RÉ MY M ARTI N
An elegant basket tote, created from woven pandan leaves by skilled artisans in Bali. bottletop.org
Bottles of Rémy Martin 1738 Accord Royal, Bruichladdich Classic Laddie and The Botanist Gin. www.remymartin.com
C H A M PAG N E
S.PELLEGRINO
TA I T T I N G E R
A magnum of sparkling water. www.sanpellegrino.com
Bottle of Champagne Taittinger Brut Réserve NV in a gift box. www.taittinger.com
H OT E L C H O C O L AT
T H E S AVOY
Rare And Vintage: The Curated Collection, a library of the finest chocolate crafted from highlyprized cocoa. www.hotelchocolat.com
Note cards, featuring McAlpine Miller’s A Time for Reflection for The Savoy. www.fairmont.com/savoy-london
LANCÔME
VILLA MARIA
La Vie Est Belle L’Eclat EDP fragrance – the essence of beauty, disguised in a bottle. www.lancome.co.uk
A tour, wine tasting and lunch at the Villa Maria winery, Auckland. www.villamaria.co.nz
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Trusted to deliver Outside Broadcasts for the world’s greatest events
CTV Outside Broadcasts Ltd - 3 The Merlin Centre, Lancaster Road, High Wycombe, HP12 3QL Adam Berger: adam@ctvob.co.uk / Bill Morris: bill@ctvob.co.uk / hello@ctvob.co.uk / 020 8453 8989 / www.ctvob.co.uk Photo credits: London Marathon: Ian Davidson/Alamy Stock Photo. Burghley Horse Trials: Paul Marriott/REX/Shutterstock. NFL International Series: Action Plus Sports Images/Alamy Stock Photo Cricket: Pakistan Tour of England: Matt West/BPI/REX/Shutterstock. BAFTA Awards: BAFTA/Richard Kendal. Boat Race: Duncan Grove/Alamy Stock Photo 1 2 DDP 4 USA/REX/Shutterstock. Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show: WENN Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo Brit Awards – Robbie Williams: David Fisher/REX/Shutterstock. Golf Open Championship:
ACKNOWLEDGE M ENTS
T H E A C A D E MY W I S H ES TO T H A N K É
Film voting juries and members
EE Our title sponsor
Film companies and distributors for their invaluable assistance
Marc Samuelson, Alison Thompson and members of the Film Committee
Joanna Lumley obe our Host
Jane Lush Chair of the Academy
Edith Bowman, Dermot O’Leary BAFTA Online Hosts
Dame Pippa Harris dbe Deputy Chair of the Academy
All staff at the Academy
AD Events International Limited Design of the Awards dinner and after party BBC
www.royalalberthall.com
Ovo by Cirque Du Soleil
West Design Royal Albert Hall Red Carpet and Press Area production
Creative Technology Limited Whizz Kid Entertainment freuds Grosvenor House A JW Marriott Hotel
Film Awards trailer created by Über Design for BAFTA Supported by DCM, Dolby, Pearl & Dean, Pinewood and The Farm Group
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BAFTA 195 PiccAdilly
PresTigious heAdquArTers oF The BriTish AcAdemy oF Film And Television ArTs lead your guests up the red carpet into this glamorous and unique venue with versatile entertaining spaces and state-of-the-art screening facilities.
For events and reservations: 195piccadilly@bafta.org 020 7292 5860 www.bafta.org/195-piccadilly @bafta195
screenocean FOOTAGE THAT BRINGS STORIES TO LIFE
Screenocean brings you BAFTA’s unique footage archive, instantly available to license online. With over 1,000 clips now available, the collection will continue to grow with new and exclusive content.
www.screenocean.com E: info@screenocean.com
T: +44 (0) 1954 262 052 1 2 6
END
CREDITS
A T B A F TA
Director of Production Clare Brown
Director of Awards & Membership Emma Baehr
Awards Event Producer Lucy Waller
Head of Film Awards Jim Bradshaw
Head of Production Cassandra Hybel
Film Awards Coordinator Imogen Faris
Production and Event Team Ryan Doherty, Daniel Dalton, Georgina Cunningham, Ciara Teggart, Ian Lowe, Brogan Wallace, Jo Cole, Keren Eliot, Helen Preece, Looloo Murphy
Awards and Voting Team Kelly Smith, Dale Ellis, Gemma Thomas, Sam D’Elia, Harriet Humphries, Timothy Hughes, Natalie Gurney, Serena Deakin, Jessica Rogers, David Lortal
Director of Partnerships Louise Robertson Partnerships Team Natalie Moss, Amy Elton, Charlie Perkin, Georgi Taroni
Communications Team Nick Williams, Clare Isaacs, Jess Lenten, Eleanor Pickering, Emma Raczkowski, Liz Tresidder, Joel Freeman
Ticketing Gabby Taranowski Accounts Lucy Burks
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BRO CHURE
CREDITS
A T B A F TA
PRINTING
Editor Toby Weidmann
Taylor Bloxham www.taylorbloxham.co.uk
Design Joe Lawrence
The Academy chooses Soporcet and Symbol, supporting excellence in print. Printed on Symbol Matt Plus 350gsm (cover), Soporcet 150gsm (text) and Symbol Freelife Gloss 170gsm (photo essay). Supplied by Taylor Bloxham.
Ad Sales Amy Elton Charlie Perkin
The carbon impact of this paper has been measured and balanced through the World Land Trust, an ecological charity.
Contributors Rosie Fletcher Clarisse Loughrey Rich Matthews Christina Newland Charlotte O’Sullivan Neil Smith Matthew Turner
Published by British Academy of Film and Television Arts 195 Piccadilly London w1j 9ln Tel: +44 (0)20 7734 0022 reception@bafta.org www.bafta.org
Photography Director Claire Rees Picture Editor Jordan Anderson
All nominees imagery used with kind permission from the distributors/filmmakers. Rising Star images courtesy of EE. Jane Lush portrait photography by Caroline True. ‘Focus on Film’ images: Jamie Simonds (Dee Rees), Greg Williams (Kathryn Bigelow), Steve Vas/Featureflash/SilverHub/REX/Shutterstock (Amanda Berry), Jordan Anderson ( Jude Kelly), Charlie Clift (Breakthrough Brits), Jamie Simonds (scholars); Jonny Birch (Guru Live), Laura Palmer (film sessions), Matt Holyoak ( Joanna Lumley), Danny Cozens (Sean Baker)
CRE AT IVE D I REC T I O N & COVER I L LUST R AT I O N
AKQA www.akqa.com +44 (0) 207 780 4786 info@akqa.com
Although every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained in this publication, the Publishers cannot accept liability for errors or omissions. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of BAFTA. © BAFTA 2018
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Our congratulations to all nominees. From your friends at iTunes Movies.
Celebrate this year’s nominees and winners at iTunes.com/bafta
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