Entertainment

Everything you need to know about this weekend’s BAFTAs

Britain’s biggest celebration of film – the BAFTAs – take place this Sunday, honouring the best movies of the last year.

With a brand-new host, two special live musical performances, and a red carpet packed with celebrities, it’s set to be a star-studded night with plenty of surprises in store.

The BAFTA Awards 2023 take place on 19 February. Pic: BAFTA/Marc Hoberman
Image:
Pic: BAFTA/Marc Hoberman

Here’s everything you need to know ahead of this year’s BAFTA Film Awards.

Where are they being held?

The ceremony will take place at the Royal Festival Hall in London’s Southbank Centre.

Sky News will be liveblogging winners as they’re announced, ahead of the televised ceremony which will air on BBC One and BBC iPlayer from 7pm on Sunday night.

Which films are in the running?

More on Bafta

A total of 38 films are up for awards.

Christopher Nolan’s epic biopic about atomic bomb creator J Robert Oppenheimer leads the pack with 13 nominations.

Cillian Murphy is J Robert Oppenheimer in Oppenheimer, written, produced, and directed by Christopher Nolan. Pic: Universal Pictures
Image:
Cillian Murphy is J Robert Oppenheimer in Oppenheimer. Pic: Universal Pictures

Gothic fairy-tale Poor Things has 11 nods, while Martin Scorsese’s Killers Of The Flower Moon and German-language drama The Zone Of Interest both have nine nods.

French courtroom drama Anatomy Of A Fall, 70s nostalgia-fest The Holdovers, and Bradley Cooper’s labour of love Maestro all have seven nominations.

Read more: See the full list of nominations here

All Of Us Strangers, starring Andrew Scott and Paul Mescal, has six nominations, while Greta Gerwig’s Barbie and Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn both have five.

Despite being the highest-grossing film of 2023, Barbie failed to make it into the best film category, and Gerwig is also absent from the directing category. It’s likely the film’s fictional heroine would have had something rather pointed to say about those omissions…

Which stars are likely to take home a gong?

If past achievements are anything to go by, Golden Globe wins earlier this year for Oppenheimer star Cillian Murphy and Poor Things actress Emma Stone set them both in good stead.

Emma Stone in Poor Things. Pic: Yorgos Lanthimos/Searchlight Pictures
Image:
Emma Stone in Poor Things. Pic: Yorgos Lanthimos/Searchlight Pictures


And he’s Britain’s most successful working director, but Christopher Nolan has never won a BAFTA for best film or best director, so many feel this could be his year.

With many of the other categories wide open, one that many of the critics are calling is best supporting actress, with The Holdovers star Da’Vine Joy Randolph considered to be the runaway favourite for both a BAFTA and an Oscar win next month.

Da'Vine Joy Randolph stars as Mary Lamb in director Alexander Payne's The Holdovers. Pic: Focus Features/Seacia Pavao
Image:
Da’Vine Joy Randolph in The Holdovers. Pic: Focus Features/Seacia Pavao

Whether audience-favourite Ryan Gosling will snap up best supporting actor is less easy to foretell.

However, his nomination in this category has received less of a frenzied response than the same nod at the Oscars, mainly due to the fact that Margot Robbie does have a BAFTA nod for best actress, while she was locked out of the Academy Award shortlist.

Jacob Elordi
Image:
Jacob Elordi

In the Rising Star category – the only award voted for the public – actor Jacob Elordi‘s much-talked about performances in Saltburn and Priscilla – would seem to give him more than an even chance of taking home the prize.

Who’s hosting?

David Tennant will host this year’s event for the first time.

David Tennant and Catherine Tate reprise their roles in the 60th anniversary special of Doctor Who
Image:
David Tennant and Catherine Tate in Doctor Who. Pic: BBC

Clearly feeling laid back about the challenge, he said: “It’ll either work and everyone will be terribly nice about it or it’ll be a total disaster and I’ll never be asked again. Either way – it’s fine.”

The 52-year-old Scottish star has said he won’t be “roasting” any of the stars on the night – an approach that has received mixed results at the BAFTAs in the past.

Last year, the awards ceremony was hosted by Saltburn actor Richard E Grant and This Morning host Alison Hammond, and the year before by Australian actress and comedian Rebel Wilson.

Tennant says he hopes it will be an “evening of generosity and joy,” and has also hinted that his former Doctor Who co-star Catherine Tate might make a surprise appearance.

Pic: Matt Crossick/Global/Shutterstock
Image:
Dua Lipa. Pic: Matt Crossick/Global/Shutterstock

Who’ll be presenting the awards?

Famous faces giving out awards include David Beckham, Dua Lipa, Hugh Grant, Idris Elba, Cate Blanchett, Gillian Anderson and Daisy Edgar Jones.

And while All Of Us Strangers co-star Andrew Scott was a notable absence from the best actor contenders, he will present a prize on the night.

Will there be any music?

The ceremony will feature performances by Sophie Ellis-Bextor and Hannah Waddingham.

Ellis-Bextor will be performing her 2001 hit Murder On The Dancefloor, which has become a viral hit since featuring in the closing finale of Saltburn.

Ted Lasso star Waddingham will also give a live musical performance, with details of her turn a closely guarded secret.

Sophie Ellis-Bextor performs one of her kitchen discos. Pic: Richard Jones
Image:
Sophie Ellis-Bextor.Pic: Richard Jones

Will any other prizes be handed out?

The Bafta Fellowship – the film academy’s highest honour – will be presented to actress Samantha Morton.

Over a three-decade career (and counting), her credits have spanned British indie productions to Hollywood blockbusters, starring in movies including Under The Skin, The Minority Report and The Whale.

Previous BAFTA Fellow include Charlie Chaplin, Elizabeth Taylor and Steven Spielberg.

Samantha Morton
Image:
Samantha Morton. Pic: Ian West/PA Photos

BAFTA’s Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema will be presented to June Givanni.

She is a pioneering film curator, writer and programmer of African and African diaspora cinema.

Givanni founded The June Givanni PanAfrican Archive (JGPACA), a volunteer-run archive comprising over 10,000 rare and unique artefacts documenting the development of filmmaking across Africa and the African diaspora, including in Britain.

Sky News will be liveblogging winners as they’re announced, from around 4.30pm on Sunday afternoon – follow it all live on our site.

Articles You May Like

UK will ‘set out a plan’ to raise defence spending to 2.5%, Starmer says
Drake claims UMG and Spotify boosted Kendrick Lamar diss track
Kempower, Proviridis partner on novel electric semi truck charging solution
FTX co-founder Gary Wang avoids prison time for role in crypto fraud
Woman who accused Conor McGregor of rape wins civil assault case – and is awarded damages