About BAFTA
The British Academy of Film and Television Arts is an independent charity that supports, develops and promotes the art forms of the moving image by identifying and rewarding excellence, inspiring practitioners and benefiting the public.
In addition to its Awards ceremonies, BAFTA has a year-round, international programme of learning events and initiatives that offers unique access to some of the world’s most inspiring talent through workshops, masterclasses, scholarships, lectures and mentoring schemes, connecting with audiences of all ages and backgrounds across the UK, Los Angeles and New York.
BAFTA relies on income from membership subscriptions, individual donations, trusts, foundations and corporate partnerships to support its ongoing outreach work.
Discover more about this year's EE British Academy Film Awards winners. See the full list of the winners | Find out about BAFTA Fellow Sir Sidney Poitier |
Read about Angels Costumes, recipients of the Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema Award
Film in 2016
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Film | Adapted Screenplay in 2016
Film | Adapted Screenplay in 2016
The Big Short
Adam McKay, Charles Randolph
Brooklyn
Nick Hornby
Carol
Phyllis Nagy
Room
Emma Donoghue
Steve Jobs
Aaron Sorkin
·
Film
| Animated Film in 2016
Inside Out
Pete Docter
Shaun the Sheep Movie
Mark Burton, Richard Starzak
Minions
Pierre Coffin, Kyle Balda
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Film
| British Short Animation in 2016
Edmond
Nina Gantz, Emilie Jouffroy
Manoman
Simon Cartwright, Kamilla Kristiane Hodol
Prologue
Richard Williams, Imogen Sutton
·
Film
| British Short Film in 2016
Operator
Caroline Bartleet, Rebecca Morgan
Elephant
Nick Helm, Alex Moody, Esther Smith
Mining Poems or Odes
Callum Rice, Jack Cocker
Samuel-613
Billy Lumby, Cheyenne Conway
Over
Jörn Threlfall, Jeremy Bannister
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Film
| Cinematography in 2016
The Revenant
Emmanuel Lubezki
Mad Max: Fury Road
John Seale
Sicario
Roger Deakins
Carol
Ed Lachman
Bridge of Spies
Janusz Kaminski
·
Film
| Costume Design in 2016
Mad Max: Fury Road
Jenny Beavan
Brooklyn
Odile Dicks-Mireaux
The Danish Girl
Paco Delgado
Cinderella
Sandy Powell
Carol
Sandy Powell
·
Film
| Director in 2016
Alejandro G. Iñárritu
The Revenant
Adam McKay
The Big Short
Steven Spielberg
Bridge of Spies
Ridley Scott
The Martian
Todd Haynes
Carol
·
Film
| Documentary in 2016
Amy
Asif Kapadia, James Gay-Rees
Listen to Me Marlon
Stevan Riley, John Battsek, George Chignell, R.J. Cutler
He Named Me Malala
Davis Guggenheim, Walter Parkes, Laurie Macdonald
Sherpa
Jennifer Peedom, Bridget Ikin, John Smithson
Cartel Land
Matthew Heineman, Tom Yellin
·
Film
| EE Rising Star in 2016
John Boyega
Taron Egerton
Dakota Johnson
Brie Larson
Bel Powley
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Film
| Editing in 2016
Mad Max: Fury Road
Margaret Sixel
The Big Short
Hank Corwin
Bridge of Spies
Michael Kahn
The Revenant
Stephen Mirrione
The Martian
Pietro Scalia
·
Film
| Film in 2016
The Revenant
Steve Golin, Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Arnon Milchan, Mary Parent,
Keith Redmon
Spotlight
Steve Golin, Blye Pagon Faust, Nicole Rocklin, Michael Sugar
Bridge of Spies
Kristie Macosko Krieger, Marc Platt, Steven Spielberg
The Big Short
Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Brad Pitt
Carol
Elizabeth Karlsen, Christine Vachon, Stephen Woolley
·
Film
| Film Not in the English Language in 2016
Wild Tales
Damián Szifron
The Assassin
Hou Hsiao-Hsien
Force Majeure
Ruben Östlund
Timbuktu
Abderrahmane Sissako
Theeb
Naji Abu Nowar
·
Film
| Leading Actor in 2016
Leonardo DiCaprio
The Revenant
Eddie Redmayne
The Danish Girl
Michael Fassbender
Steve Jobs
Matt Damon
The Martian
Bryan Cranston
Trumbo
·
Film
| Leading Actress in 2016
Brie Larson
Room
Maggie Smith
The Lady in the Van
Alicia Vikander
The Danish Girl
Cate Blanchett
Carol
Saoirse Ronan
Brooklyn
·
Film
| Make-Up And Hair in 2016
Mad Max: Fury Road
Lesley Vanderwalt, Damian Martin
Brooklyn
Morna Ferguson, Lorraine Glynn
The Revenant
Sian Grigg, Duncan Jarman, Robert Pandini
The Danish Girl
Jan Sewell
Carol
Jerry Decarlo, Patricia Regan, Morag Ross
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Film
| Original Music in 2016
The Hateful Eight
Ennio Morricone
Bridge of Spies
Thomas Newman
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
John Williams
Sicario
Jóhann Jóhannsson
The Revenant
Ryuichi Sakamoto, Alva Noto
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Film
| Original Screenplay in 2016
Spotlight
Tom McCarthy, Josh Singer
Inside Out
Josh Cooley, Pete Docter, Meg Lefauve
The Hateful Eight
Quentin Tarantino
Ex Machina
Alex Garland
Bridge of Spies
Matthew Charman, Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
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Film
| Outstanding British Film in 2016
Brooklyn
John Crowley, Finola Dwyer, Amanda Posey, Nick Hornby
The Danish Girl
Tom Hooper, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Anne Harrison, Gail Mutrux,
Lucinda Coxon
Ex Machina
Alex Garland, Andrew Macdonald, Allon Reich
Amy
Asif Kapadia, James Gay-Rees
45 Years
Andrew Haigh, Tristan Goligher
The Lobster
Yorgos Lanthimos, Ceci Dempsey, Ed Guiney, Lee Magiday, Efthimis
Filippou
·
Film
| Outstanding Debut By A British Writer, Director or Producer in 2016
Naji Abu Nowar, Rupert Lloyd
Theeb
Debbie Tucker Green
Second Coming
Stephen Fingleton
The Survivalist
Alex Garland
Ex Machina
Sean McAllister, Elhum Shakerifar
A Syrian Love Story
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Film
| Production Design in 2016
Mad Max: Fury Road
Colin Gibson, Lisa Thompson
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Rick Carter, Darren Gilford, Lee Sandales
The Martian
Arthur Max, Celia Bobak
Carol
Judy Becker, Heather Loeffler
Bridge of Spies
Adam Stockhausen, Rena DeAngelo, Bernhard Henrich
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Film
| Sound in 2016
The Revenant
Lon Bender, Chris Duesterdiek, Martin Hernandez, Frank A. Montaño,
Jon Taylor, Randy Thom
Mad Max: Fury Road
Scott Hecker, Chris Jenkins, Mark Mangini, Ben Osmo, Gregg
Rudloff, David White
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
David Acord, Andy Nelson, Christopher Scarabosio, Matthew Wood,
Stuart Wilson
Bridge of Spies
Drew Kunin, Richard Hymns, Andy Nelson, Gary Rydstrom
The Martian
Paul Massey, Mac Ruth, Oliver Tarney, Mark Taylor
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Film
| Special Visual Effects in 2016
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Chris Corbould, Roger Guyett, Paul Kavanagh, Neal Scanlan
Ant-Man
Jake Morrison, Greg Steele, Dan Sudick, Alex Wuttke
Mad Max: Fury Road
Andrew Jackson, Dan Oliver, Tom Wood, Andy Williams
The Martian
Chris Lawrence, Tim Ledbury, Richard Stammers, Steven Warner
Ex Machina
Mark Ardington, Sara Bennett, Paul Norris, Andrew Whitehurst
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Film
| Supporting Actor in 2016
Mark Rylance
Bridge of Spies
Idris Elba
Beasts of No Nation
Christian Bale
The Big Short
Mark Ruffalo
Spotlight
Benicio Del Toro
Sicario
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Film
| Supporting Actress in 2016
Kate Winslet
Steve Jobs
Jennifer Jason Leigh
The Hateful Eight
Alicia Vikander
Ex Machina
Julie Walters
Brooklyn
Rooney Mara
Carol
Sir Sidney Poitier | BAFTA Fellowship in 2016
Sir Sidney Poitier was honoured with the Academy's highest honour, the Fellowship, at the EE British Academy Film Awards on Sunday 14 February.
Sir Sidney Poitier’s award-winning career features six BAFTA nominations, including one BAFTA win, and a British Academy Britannia Award for Lifetime Contribution to International Film. Find out more about his exceptional career.
ANDY GOTTS/BAFTA
It's been nearly 60 years since BAFTA first recognised the talents of Sidney Poitier, the recipient of this year’s Fellowship, with his first nomination in 1957. The following year Poitier received the Foreign Actor award for The Defiant Ones, Stanley Kramer’s landmark drama about two escaped prisoners. “I have to acknowledge Stanley as probably the most important element in my career. He was a remarkable, extraordinary and very principled man who was pivotal to moving me forward in my craft.” says Poitier, who would collaborate with the director again, nine years later, on Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner.
In 1967, the success of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, To Sir With Love and In the Heat of the Night - the murder mystery that saw Poitier take on his most iconic role as detective ‘Mister’ Virgil Tibbs – saw the actor become the first black star to be a top box office draw. These films bolstered his stature as a role model and icon, and saw him become part of a greater debate about civil rights and racial equality.
I felt fortunate to play parts in movies that challenged prejudices, took on repressive regimes or involved interracial relationships, whose storylines dared to show a black man as powerful, articulate and important at a time when that wasn’t acceptable to many. But I don’t pretend to be an icon, because I only got that from the opportunities that were given to me and the people who gave me those opportunities.


By the end of the 1960s, Poitier had enough commercial clout to join Barbra Streisand and Paul Newman in the creation of First Artists, a production outfit intended to afford them and others a greater say over the films in which they starred. “The industry is moving into a new era,” Poitier said at the time. “You either lead it, or move with it, or follow it. We have opted for leadership.” Here Poitier moved into directing and saw success with prison caper Stir Crazy, starring Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor, which made more than $100 million at the US box office, the first film to be directed by an African-American to ever pass that benchmark.
I was exposed to filmmakers who were extremely gifted and I came away from all those experiences knowing how they did things in such a remarkable way. I never worked on a film where I did not learn something wonderful from a very good director or a very good writer.
In the 35 years since, Poitier has received an honorary Oscar, a BAFTA Britannia Award, the Cecil B DeMille Award, the Presidential Medal of Freedom and his Bahamian ancestry enabled him to be knighted by the Queen in 1974. His latest accolade, the BAFTA Fellowship, is one he says he is “honoured in the extreme” to receive.
I feel and have always felt a remarkable connection to England, not just in filmmaking but culturally too. What you have passed on to me I will remember – always.
Moviestore/REX/ShutterstockBAFTA wins and nominations
1958 Foreign Actor, A Man is Ten Feet Tall
1959 Foreign Actor, The Defiant Ones WON
1962 Foreign Actor, A Raisin in the Sun
1965 Foreign Actor, Lilies of the Field
1967 Foreign Actor, A Patch of Blue
2006 Britannia Award for Lifetime Contributions to International FilmWON
Angels Costumes | Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema
Angels Costumes was honoured with the awards for Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema at the EE British Academy Film Awards on Sunday 14 February.
BAFTA/Stephen Butler
Tim Angel accepts the awa
Now in its 175th year, Angels Costumes is the world’s longest-established and largest professional costume house, having become an integral part of the international film industry over the past century. With a collection that spans eight miles of hanging rails, and is made up of over 1m items of clothing, Angels is one of the most well-respected and celebrated companies in the industry, providing costumes for theatre, TV, film, photo shoots, advertisements and music videos.


Since the emergence of cinema in the early 1900s, Angels has worked closely with some of the medium’s most pre-eminent figures, including Alfred Hitchcock, Powell and Pressburger, David Lean, Michael Balcon, Herbert Wilcox, Anthony Asquith, Richard Attenborough, Alan Parker, Anthony Minghella, Martin Scorsese, and Steven Spielberg, as well as across genres and franchises: from the Ealing Comedies, films produced by Gainsborough Studios and Hammer, to the Carry On films, Bond, Star Wars, Pirates of the Caribbean, and Harry Potter.
Watch Angela Scanlon go behind the scenes at Angels' warehouse >
Designs by Lindy Hemming for Simon Callow's costume in Four Weddings and a Funeral and the finished waistcoat in the film
Designer Lindy Hemming
Sketch design by Phyllis Dalton for Kenneth Branagh's costume inHenry V and the garments in action
Designer Phyllis Dalton
Angels has worked on numerous productions that have won a BAFTA or Oscar for Best Costume, including: Hamlet, Doctor Zhivago, Star Wars, Chariots of Fire, Braveheart, The English Patient, Shakespeare in Love, Sleepy Hollow, The Duchess, Anna Karenina, The Great Gatsby, and The Grand Budapest Hotel. This year, Angels supplied costumes to several films nominated at the EE British Academy Film Awards, including Cinderella, The Danish Girl, Bridge of Spies and The Lady in the Van.
The Duchess
The Great Gatsby
The Grand Budapest Hotel
Established in 1840, Angels is a seventh-generation family business, led by Chairman Tim Angel OBE, who has also served as Chairman of BAFTA and a Governor of the BFI.
To have been at the heart of the British and international film industry from the very start is an incredible achievement, and we are all honoured to play a role in its continued growth. As cinema has evolved and changed, so too has Angels, and we are looking forward to seeing what the next hundred years of film will bring!
Tim Angel OBE, Chairman of Angels Costumes


The Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema Award is presented annually in honour of Michael Balcon, the British film producer known for his work with Ealing Studios. Previous recipients include Mike Leigh, Kenneth Branagh, Derek Jarman, Mary Selway, Ridley and Tony Scott, Working Title Films, Lewis Gilbert, the Harry Potter series of films, John Hurt, Peter Greenaway and Tessa Ross. Last year’s recipient was BBC Films.
Source by...http://www.bafta.org/film/awards/film-awards-winners-in-2016#supporting-actress---kate-winslet






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