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There's no such thing as expected at BAFTA," explains Anna Higgs, chair of the film committee, speaking to Variety after the nominees were announced. "I think to play a guessing game with our expert members and where they can go, particularly in a year that's so competitive, is hard."



Whatever happened to "Barbie"? This is likely to be one of the burning topics following the revelation of the 2024 BAFTA Film Awards nominations on Thursday, which saw Greta Gerwig's cultural phenomenon and box office powerhouse go unnominated in the best film and director categories.

While the film's five BAFTA nominations (including leading actress, supporting actor, and original screenplay) are undeniably impressive, the figure is likely to have taken many awards watchers by surprise. The film landed 15 positions on the BAFTA Longlists earlier this month after the first round of voting, tying for top place with "Oppenheimer" (which eventually received 13 nominations) and "Killers of the Flower Moon" (nine nominations). Given its status as the biggest film of 2023, and the fact that it has broken so many key records along the way, many may have felt a best film and director nomination was almost certain.

Higgs notes that both the number of BAFTA film entries and the number of movies voters are watching is up year-on-year, making it “more and more competitive, and more intense.”

While Gerwig may not have landed a director nomination, neither did many female directors, with “Anatomy of a Fall’s” Justine Triet the solitary woman among the six. This is an area that BAFTA sought to improve with the major overhaul of its voting process in 2020 (following a year where zero female directors were nominated), which added the Longlist stage that included an intervention to ensure gender parity.

"But we know it's not a fair race from the start," adds Higgs, citing a recent study that found only 12 female directors among the top 100 grossing films of the previous year. "We only have one female-directed picture for every three films directed by men. So having a woman on that nominee's list is a wonderful thing."

She does, however, highlight four female directors in the category of great British films: Molly Manning Walker ("How to Have Sex"), Raine Allen Miller ("Rye Lane"), Emerald Fennell ("Saltburn"), and Charlotte Regan ("Scrapper").

"We've got lots of women across the board," Higgs says, adding that 11 of the 33 directors nominated in various categories this year are women. "And we're seeing brand new emerging filmmakers with debut films up against legendary filmmakers, which speaks to the excitement and also the range of films that BAFTA celebrates for their excellence on their merit."


BAFTA 2024 NOMINATIONS are as follows:


Best film






Outstanding British film






Poor Things






Outstanding debut by a British writer, director or producer


Blue Bag Life – Lisa Selby (director), Rebecca Lloyd-Evans (director, producer), Alex Fry (producer)


Bobi Wine: The People’s President – Christopher Sharp (director) [also directed by Moses Bwayo]


Earth Mama – Savanah Leaf (writer, director, producer), Shirley O’Connor (producer), Medb Riordan (producer)


How to Have Sex – Molly Manning Walker (writer, director)


Is There Anybody Out There? – Ella Glendining (director)

Best film not in the English language



Anatomy of a Fall




The Zone of Interest

Best animated film






Best Documentary


20 Days in Mariupol

Best director


Andrew Haigh, All of Us Strangers


Justine Triet, Anatomy of a Fall


Alexander Payne, The Holdovers


Bradley Cooper, Maestro


Christopher Nolan, Oppenheimer


Jonathan Glazer, The Zone of Interest

Best original screenplay


Anatomy of a Fall



The Holdovers



Past Lives

Best adapted screenplay


All of Us Strangers



Oppenheimer


Poor Things


The Zone of Interest


Best leading actress


Fantasia Barrino, The Color Purple


Sandra Hüller, Anatomy of a Fall


Carey Mulligan, Maestro


Vivian Oparah, Rye Lane


Margot Robbie, Barbie


Emma Stone, Poor Things


Best leading actor


Bradley Cooper, Maestro


Colman Domingo, Rustin


Paul Giamatti, The Holdovers


Barry Keoghan, Saltburn


Cillian Murphy, Oppenheimer


Teo Yoo, Past Lives


Best supporting actress


Emily Blunt, Oppenheimer


Danielle Brooks, The Color Purple


Claire Foy, All of Us Strangers


Sandra Hüller, The Zone of Interest


Rosamund Pike, Saltburn


Da’Vine Joy Randolph, The Holdovers


Best supporting actor


Robert De Niro, Killers of the Flower Moon


Robert Downey Jr, Oppenheimer


Jacob Elordi, Saltburn


Ryan Gosling, Barbie


Paul Mescal, All of Us Strangers


Dominic Sessa, The Holdovers



Best casting


All of Us Strangers


Anatomy of a Fall


The Holdovers


How to Have Sex


Killers of the Flower Moon


Best Cinematography


Killers of the Flower Moon


Maestro


Oppenheimer


Poor Things


The Zone of Interest


Best Editing


Anatomy of a Fall


Killers of the Flower Moon


Oppenheimer


Poor Things


The Zone of Interest


Best costume design


Barbie


Killers of the Flower Moon


Napoleon


Oppenheimer


Poor Things


Best makeup and hair


Killers of the Flower Moon


Maestro


Napoleon


Oppenheimer


Poor Things


Best original score


Killers of the Flower Moon


Oppenheimer


Poor Things


Saltburn


Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse


Best production design


Barbie


Killers of the Flower Moon


Oppenheimer


Poor Things


The Zone of Interest


Best sound



Maestro



Oppenheimer


The Zone of Interest


Best special visual effects




Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One


Napoleon


Poor Things



Best British short animation


Crab Day


Visible Mending


Wild Summon


Best British short film


Festival of Slaps


Gorka


Jellyfish and Lobster


Such a Lovely Day


Yellow


EE BAFTA Rising Star award (voted for by the public)


Phoebe Dynevor


Ayo Edebiri


Jacob Elordi


Mia McKenna-Bruce


Sophie Wilde




The nominees for the BAFTA TV Awards, which will be held on May 14 at the Royal Festival Hall, have been announced. Comedians Romesh Ranganathan and Rob Beckett will host the event.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, a US-based media outlet, the medical fiction miniseries 'This is Going to Hurt' and the drama series 'The Responder' both have six nominations.


Drama series


Mini-series


International

The Bear. Photograph: AP

The Bear (Disney+) Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story (Netflix) Wednesday (Netflix) Oussekine (Itineraire) Pachinko (Apple TV+) The White Lotus (Sky Atlantic)


Leading actress

Billie Piper – I Hate Suzie Too (Sky Atlantic) Imelda Staunton – The Crown (Netflix) Kate Winslet – I Am Ruth (Channel 4) Maxine Peake – Anne (Channel 4) Sarah Lancashire – Julia (Sky Atlantic) Vicky McClure – Without Sin (ITVX)


Leading actor

Chaske Spencer with Emily Blunt in The English. Photograph: Diego Lopez Calvin/BBC/PA

Ben Whishaw – This Is Going to Hurt (BBC One) Chaske Spencer – The English (BBC Two) Cillian Murphy – Peaky Blinders (BBC One) Gary Oldman – Slow Horses (Apple TV+) Martin Freeman – The Responder (BBC One) Taron Egerton – Black Bird (Apple TV+)


Female performance in a comedy programme

Daisy May Cooper – Am I Being Unreasonable? (BBC One) Diane Morgan – Cunk on Earth (BBC Two) Lucy Beaumont – Meet the Richardsons (Dave) Natasia Demetriou – Ellie & Natasia (BBC Three) Siobhán McSweeney – Derry Girls (Channel 4) Taj Atwal – Hullraisers (Channel 4)


Male performance in a comedy programme

Daniel Radcliffe – Weird: The Al Yankovic Story (The Roku Channel) Jon Pointing – Big Boys (Channel 4) Joseph Gilgun – Brassic (Sky Max) Lenny Rush – Am I Being Unreasonable? (BBC One) Matt Berry – What We Do in the Shadows (Disney+) Stephen Merchant – The Outlaws (BBC One)


Supporting actor

Adeel Akhtar – Sherwood (BBC One) Jack Lowden – Slow Horses (Apple TV+) Josh Finan – The Responder (BBC One) Salim Daw – The Crown (Netflix) Samuel Bottomley – Somewhere Boy (Channel 4) Will Sharpe – The White Lotus (Sky Atlantic)


Supporting actress


Jasmine Jobson as Jaq in-Top Boy. Photograph: Chris Harris

Adelayo Adedayo – The Responder (BBC One) Anne-Marie Duff – Bad Sisters (Apple TV+) Fiona Shaw – Andor (Disney+) Jasmine Jobson – Top Boy (Netflix) Lesley Manville – Sherwood (BBC One) Saffron Hocking – Top Boy (Netflix)


Entertainment performance

Big Zuu, Big Zuu’s Big Eats (Dave) Claudia Winkleman, The Traitors (BBC One) Lee Mack, The 1% Club (ITV1) Mo Gilligan, The Lateish Show With Mo Gilligan (Channel 4) Rosie Jones, Rosie Jones’ Trip Hazard (Channel 4) Sue Perkins, Sue Perkins: Perfectly Legal (Netflix)


Specialist factual

Aids: The Unheard Tapes (BBC Two) The Green Planet (BBC One) How to Survive a Dictator With Munya Chawawa (Channel 4) Russia 1985-1999: Traumazone (iPlayer)


Reality and constructed factual

Freddie Flintoff’s Field of Dreams (BBC One) RuPaul’s Drag Race UK (BBC Three) The Traitors (BBC One) We Are Black and British (BBC Two)


Current affairs

Afghanistan: No Country for Women: Exposure (ITV1) Children of the Taliban (Channel 4) The Crossing: Exposure (ITV1) Mariupol: The People’s Story – Panorama (BBC One)


Entertainment programme

Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway (ITV) Later … With Jools Holland (BBC Two) The Masked Singer (ITV) Strictly Come Dancing (BBC One)


Scripted comedy

Derry Girls. Photograph: Peter Marley/Channel 4 Television/Hatrick Productions

Am I Being Unreasonable? (BBC One) Big Boys (Channel 4) Derry Girls (Channel 4) Ghosts (BBC One)


Comedy entertainment programme

Friday Night Live (Channel 4) The Graham Norton Show (BBC One) Taskmaster (Channel 4) Would I Lie To You? (BBC One)


Short form programme

Always, Asifa (Together TV) Biscuitland (All 4) How to Be a Person (E4) Kingpin Cribs (YouTube/Channel 4)


Factual series

Jeremy Kyle Show: Death on Daytime (Channel 4) Libby, Are You Home Yet? (Sky Crime) Vatican Girl: The Disappearance of Emanuela Orlandi (Netflix) Worlds Collide: The Manchester Bombing (ITV1)


Features

Big Zuu’s Big Eats (Dave) Joe Lycett vs Beckham: Got Your Back (Channel 4) The Martin Lewis Money Show Live (ITV1) The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan (BBC Two)


Live event

Concert for Ukraine (ITV1) Platinum Jubilee: Party at the Palace (BBC One) The State Funeral of HM Queen Elizabeth II (BBC One)


News coverage

BBC News at 10: Russia Invades Ukraine (BBC One) Channel 4 News: Live in Kyiv (Channel 4) Good Morning Britain: Boris Johnson Interview (ITV1)


Single documentary

The Real Mo Farah. Photograph: Andy Boag/BBC/Atomized Studios

Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes (Sky Documentaries) Escape from Kabul Airport (BBC Two) Our Falklands War: A Frontline Story (BBC Two) The Real Mo Farah (BBC One)


Single drama

I Am Ruth (Channel 4) The House (Netflix) Life and Death in the Warehouse (BBC Three)

Soap and continuing drama

Casualty (BBC One) EastEnders (BBC One) Emmerdale (ITV1)

Sport

Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games (BBC One) UEFA Women’s Euro 2022 (BBC One) Wimbledon 2022 (BBC One)




The BAFTA Film Awards have announced the longlists for this year's 24 categories, with "All Quiet on the Western Front" and "The Banshees of Inisherin" leading the way.


Swati Bhat

BAFTA Official


Ten films will advance in the Film Not in English Language category. All BAFTA film voting members were invited to participate in an opt-in chapter to determine the longlist. This chapter will vote to nominate five films and will select the overall winner. 49 films were submitted for consideration.

Netflix's wartime drama "All Quiet" leads with 15 nominations, followed by Searchlight Pictures' "Banshees" with 14. Meanwhile, A24's "Everything, Everywhere, All At Once" and Warner Bros.' "Elvis" each have 12 nominations, while A24's British hit "Aftersun," Paramount Pictures' "Top Gun: Maverick" and "Babylon," and Focus Features' "Tár" each have eight.

The longlists are based on votes cast during Round 1, which concluded on December 30. These films will now all advance to the nominating stage of voting, which will take place from Friday, January 6 to Monday, January 13.

The final BAFTA nominations will be announced on January 19 at a live event and global livestream hosted by Hayley Attwell and Toheeb Jimoh. The awards ceremony will be held on Sunday, Feb. 19, at the Southbank Centre's Royal Festival Hall, rather than the Royal Albert Hall, as is customary.

All eyes will be on BAFTA for hints about which films have the Academy's European voting bloc's support. In recent years, a sizable contingent of English, French, and other continental members has influenced Oscar nominations and eventual winners (see Anthony Hopkins winning best actor over presumed front-runner Chadwick Boseman in 2021).

This year's longlists are already full of surprises. Consider the conspicuous absence of James Cameron's "Avatar: The Way of Water" (Disney) from both the best film and director lists. The same can be said for Damien Chazelle's "Babylon," which did not make the best film or director lists despite receiving eight nominations in other categories. Similarly, Andrew Dominik's "Blonde" (Netflix) only had Ana de Armas on the longlist for best actress, as well as make-up and hair.

In the supporting actress category, both Jessie Buckley and Claire Foy were omitted entirely for "Women Talking" (MGM/United Artists Releasing), with only Ben Whishaw receiving a nod for his role in the Sarah Polley film.


Longlists for this year:

BEST FILM

• “Aftersun” • “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “Elvis” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “The Fabelmans” • “Living” • “Tár” • “Top Gun: Maverick” • “Triangle of Sadness”

In the Best Film category, ten films will advance. A total of 214 films were submitted for consideration. To determine the longlist, nominations, and overall winner, all BAFTA film voting members vote.


OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM

• “Aftersun” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “Blue Jean” • “Brian And Charles” • “Emily” • “Empire of Light” • “Good Luck to You, Leo Grande” • “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” • “Living” • “The Lost King” • “Mrs Harris Goes To Paris” • “Roald Dahl’s Matilda The Musical” • “See How They Run” • “The Swimmers” • “The Wonder”

In the Outstanding British Film category, 15 films will advance. To determine the longlist, all BAFTA film voting members were invited to join an opt-in chapter (of which the top five are nominated). The remaining five nominations are chosen by a jury. The winning film is determined in the final round by all film voting members. For consideration, 57 eligible films were submitted.


OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER

• “Aftersun” • “Blue Jean” • “Donna” • “Electric Malady” • “Emily” • “Good Luck to You, Leo Grande” • “Nothing Compares” • “Rebellion” • “See How They Run” • “Wayfinder”

In the Outstanding Debut category, ten films will advance. In this category, a jury selects the longlist, nominations, and overall winner. For consideration, 41 eligible films were submitted.


FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Argentina, 1985” • “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” • “Close” • “Corsage” • “Decision To Leave” • “EO” • “Holy Spider” • “The Quiet Girl” • “RRR”

In the Film Not in English Language category, ten films will advance. To determine the longlist, all BAFTA film voting members were invited to join an opt-in chapter. This chapter will vote on five films to be nominated and on the overall winning film. There were 49 eligible films submitted for consideration.


DOCUMENTARY

• “All That Breathes” • “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed” • “A Bunch Of Amateurs” • “Fire of Love” • “The Ghost of Richard Harris” • “Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a Journey, a Song” • “Louis Armstrong’s Black & Blues” • “McEnroe” • “Moonage Daydream” • “Navalny”

In the Documentary category, ten films will advance. To determine the longlist, all BAFTA film voting members were invited to join an opt-in chapter (of which the top two are nominated). The remaining three nominations are chosen by a jury, and the winning film is decided by the Documentary opt-in chapter in the final round. A total of 56 films were submitted for consideration.


ANIMATED FILM

• “The Amazing Maurice” • “The Bad Guys” • “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” • “Lightyear” • “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On” • “Minions: The Rise of Gru” • “Puss in Boots: The Last Wish” • “Turning Red”

Eight films will advance in the Animated Film category. All BAFTA film voting members were invited to join an opt-in chapter to determine the longlist. This chapter will vote to nominate four films and will vote for the winning film. 21 eligible films were submitted for consideration.


DIRECTOR

• “Aftersun” • “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “Corsage” • “Decision To Leave” • “Elvis” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “Fire of Love” • “The Quiet Girl” • “Saint Omer” • “She Said” • “Tár” • “Till” • “Top Gun: Maverick” • “The Woman King” • “Women Talking”

The Director category will see 16 films advance. Members of the Directing chapter vote to create a longlist of ten nominees (five male and five female), from which the top two are chosen. A jury chooses three more men and three women for a total of 16 candidates (eight male and eight female directors). A jury chooses four directors from the longlist to form a list of six nominees. The winning film is determined in the final round by all film voting members. A total of 206 films were submitted for consideration.


ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

• “Aftersun” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “Decision To Leave” • “Elvis” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “The Fabelmans” • “Good Luck to You, Leo Grande” • “The Menu” • “Tár” • “Triangle of Sadness”

In the Original Screenplay category, ten films will advance. The longlist and nominations are decided by members of the Writers chapter. All film voting members will vote for the winning film in the final round of voting. A total of 82 films were submitted for consideration.


ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” • “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” • “Living” • “The Quiet Girl” • “She Said” • “Top Gun: Maverick” • “The Whale” • “Women Talking” • “The Wonder”

In the Adapted Screenplay category, ten films will advance. The longlist and nominations are decided by members of the Writers chapter. All film voting members will vote for the winning film in the final round of voting. For consideration, 69 eligible films were submitted.


LEADING ACTRESS

• Naomi Ackie in “I Wanna Dance With Somebody” • Ana de Armas in “Blonde” • Cate Blanchett in “Tár” • Jessica Chastain in “The Good Nurse” • Viola Davis in “The Woman King” • Danielle Deadwyler in “Till” • Lesley Manville in “Mrs Harris Goes To Paris” • Emma Thompson in “Good Luck to You, Leo Grande” • Michelle Williams in “The Fabelmans” • Michelle Yeoh in “Everything Everywhere All At Once”

In the Leading Actress category, ten performances will advance. Acting chapter members vote to determine the longlist (of which the top three are nominated). A longlisting jury chooses three more performances for a total of ten. A nominating jury then chooses three performances from the longlist to form a nominee list of six. In the final round, all members of the film voting panel vote to determine the winning performance. There were 101 submissions for consideration.


LEADING ACTOR

• Austin Butler in “Elvis” • Tom Cruise in “Top Gun: Maverick” • Harris Dickinson in “Triangle of Sadness” • Brendan Fraser in “The Whale” • Colin Farrell in “The Banshees of Inisherin” • Daniel Kaluuya in “Nope” • Felix Kammerer in “All Quiet on the Western Front” • Daryl McCormack in “Good Luck to You, Leo Grande” • Paul Mescal in “Aftersun” • Bill Nighy in “Living”

In the Leading Actor category, ten performances will advance. Acting chapter members vote to determine the longlist (of which the top three are nominated). A longlisting jury chooses three more performances for a total of ten. A nominating jury then chooses three performances from the longlist to form a nominee list of six. In the final round, all members of the film voting panel vote to determine the winning performance. There were 113 submissions for consideration.


SUPPORTING ACTRESS

• Angela Bassett in “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” • Hong Chau in “The Whale” • Kerry Condon in “The Banshees of Inisherin” • Jamie Lee Curtis in “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • Dolly De Leon in “Triangle of Sadness” • Lashana Lynch in “The Woman King” • Janelle Monáe in “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” • Carey Mulligan in “She Said” • Emma Thompson in “Roald Dahl’s Matilda The Musical” • Aimee Lou Wood in “Living”

In the category of Supporting Actress, ten performances will advance. Acting chapter members vote to determine the longlist (of which the top three are nominated). A longlisting jury chooses three more performances for a total of ten. A nominating jury then chooses three performances from the longlist to form a nominee list of six. In the final round, all members of the film voting panel vote to determine the winning performance. There were 260 submissions for consideration.


SUPPORTING ACTOR

• Brendan Gleeson in “The Banshees of Inisherin” • Tom Hanks in “Elvis” • Woody Harrelson in “Triangle of Sadness” • Barry Keoghan in “The Banshees of Inisherin” • Brad Pitt in “Babylon” • Ke Huy Quan in “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • Eddie Redmayne in “The Good Nurse” • Albrecht Schuch in “All Quiet on the Western Front” • Micheal Ward in “Empire of Light” • Ben Whishaw in “Women Talking”

In the Supporting Actor category, ten performances will advance. Acting chapter members vote to determine the longlist (of which the top three are nominated). A longlisting jury chooses three more performances for a total of ten. A nominating jury then chooses three performances from the longlist to form a nominee list of six. In the final round, all members of the film voting panel vote to determine the winning performance. There were 325 submissions for consideration.


CASTING

• “Aftersun” • “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “Elvis” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “The Fabelmans” • “Living” • “Roald Dahl’s Matilda The Musical” • “Tár” • “Triangle of Sadness”

In the Casting category, ten films will advance. Casting chapter members vote to determine the longlist. The five nominations are chosen by a jury, and the winning film is chosen by all film voting members in the final round. A total of 126 films were submitted for consideration.


CINEMATOGRAPHY

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Amsterdam” • “Athena” • “Babylon” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “The Batman” • “Elvis” • “Empire of Light” • “Tár” • “Top Gun: Maverick”

In the Cinematography category, ten films will advance. The longlist and nominations are decided by members of the Cinematography chapter. All film voting members will vote for the overall winning film in the final round of voting. A total of 167 films were submitted for consideration.


COSTUME DESIGN

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Amsterdam” • “Babylon” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” • “Corsage” • “Elvis” • “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” • “Mrs Harris Goes To Paris” • “Roald Dahl’s Matilda The Musical”

In the Costume Design category, ten films will advance. The longlist and nominations are decided by members of the Costume and Makeup & Hair chapters. All film voting members will vote for the overall winning film in the final round of voting. A total of 119 films were submitted for consideration.


EDITING

• “Aftersun” • “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Babylon” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “Decision To Leave” • “Elvis” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “Moonage Daydream” • “Top Gun: Maverick” • “Triangle of Sadness”

In the Editing category, ten films will advance. The Editing chapter members vote to determine the longlist and nominations. All film voting members will vote for the overall winning film in the final round of voting. A total of 185 films were submitted for consideration.


MAKE UP & HAIR

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Amsterdam” • “Babylon” • “The Batman” • “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” • “Blonde” • “Elvis” • “Emancipation” • “Roald Dahl’s Matilda The Musical” • “The Whale”

In the Make Up & Hair category, ten films will advance. The longlist and nominations are decided by members of the Costume Design and Make Up & Hair chapters. All film voting members will vote for the overall winning film in the final round of voting. A total of 117 films were submitted for consideration.


ORIGINAL SCORE

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Babylon” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “The Batman” • “Empire of Light” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery” • “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” • “Tár” • “Women Talking” • “The Wonder”

In the Original Score category, 11 films will advance. Music chapter members vote to determine the longlist and nominations. All film voting members will vote for the overall winning film in the final round of voting. A total of 137 films were submitted for consideration. Entrants provide music cue sheets, which are then published on BAFTA View.


PRODUCTION DESIGN

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Avatar: The Way of Water” • “Babylon” • “The Banshees of Inisherin” • “The Batman” • “Elvis” • “Empire of Light” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “The Fabelmans” • “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio”

In the Production Design category, ten films will advance. The longlist and nominations are decided by members of the Production Design chapter. All film voting members will vote for the overall winning film in the final round of voting. A total of 134 films were submitted for consideration.


SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Avatar: The Way of Water” • “The Batman” • “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” • “Doctor Strange In The Multiverse Of Madness” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore” • “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” • “Jurassic World Dominion” • “Top Gun: Maverick”

In the Special Visual Effects category, ten films will advance. SVFX chapter members vote to determine the longlist and nominations. All film voting members will vote for the overall winning film in the final round of voting. There were 69 films submitted for consideration. A supporting Statement as well as a showreel of the SVFX work (up to five minutes in length) can be submitted and published on BAFTA View.


SOUND

• “All Quiet on the Western Front” • “Avatar: The Way of Water” • “Babylon” • “The Batman” • “Elvis” • “Everything Everywhere All At Once” • “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” • “Tár” • “Thirteen Lives” • “Top Gun: Maverick”

In the Sound category, ten films will advance. Sound chapter members vote to determine the longlist and nominations. All film voting members will vote for the overall winning film in the final round of voting. There were 170 films submitted for consideration.


BRITISH SHORT ANIMATION

• “Beware of Trains” • “The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse” • “Christopher at Sea” • “Middle Watch” • “Salvation Has No Name” • “Your Mountain is Waiting”

In the British Short Animation category, six films will advance. The longlist and nominations are decided by a jury. All film voting members are invited to join an opt-in chapter to vote for the overall winning short animation in the final round of voting.


BRITISH SHORT FILM

• “The Ballad Of Olive Morris” • “Bazigaga” • “Bus Girl” • “A Drifting Up” • “A Fox in the Night” • “An Irish Goodbye” • “Little Berlin” • “Love Languages” • “Too Rough” • “WanderLand”

In the British Short Film category, ten films will advance. The longlist and nominations are decided by a jury. All film voting members are invited to join an opt-in chapter to vote for the overall winning short film in the final round of voting.





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