Atonement and Coen Brothers Lead the BAFTA Nominations

As this year's BAFTA nominations are announced, Atonement and No Country For Old Men stand out as the favourites.

by Jennie Kermode

With this year's BAFTA nominations now announced, Ian McEwan adaptation Atonement stands out as the clear favourite with a total of 14 nominations. James McAvoy is up for Best Actor as the ambitious but unfortunate working class lad Robbie, with Keira Knightley nominated for Best Actress as the upper class woman he falls in love with. Young Saoirse Ronan is in the running for Best Supporting Actress as the sister who comes between them, setting up a chain of consequences which will destroy all of their lives.

Also going strong, after a quiet few years, are Joel and Ethan Coen, whose work won a total of nine nominations. No Country For Old Men, which is currently proving a hit at the box office, weaves a complex tale of temptation and loss with Javier Bardem as a truly terrifying villain. Both Bardem and Tommy Lee Jones enjoy Best Supporting Actor nominations and Kelly MacDonald has been nominated as Best Supporting Actress.

Joining these two in the Best Film category are American Gangster, There Will Be Blood, and sleeper hit The Lives Of Others. Atonement appears again in the Best British Film category, alongside The Bourne Ultimatum, Control, Eastern Promises and This Is England. Up for a Special Achievement award for a debut project is Chris Atkins, whose documentary Taking Liberties, takes a look at the threat to long-established liberal freedoms in current British politics. "I'm flabbergasted and thrilled but worried that it won’t do my anti-establishment credentials any good!" was his response. If you'd like to know more, take a look at our interview with Chris Atkins from last year.

One notable loser was Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street, which was nominated only in technical categories despite having been expected to be a front runner.

This year's BAFTA ceremony is expected to be more spectacular than ever. With the writers' strike preventing Hollywood stars from attending American events like the Golden Globes ceremony and, quite possibly, the Oscars, the BAFTAs have suddenly become established as the place to be seen and the place to party. The ceremony will take place on the 10th of February.

Share this with others on...
News

Going off-plan Ben Wheatley on early inspirations, developing his craft and making Normal

The accidental revolutionary Dimitri Planchon and Jean-Paul Guigue discuss artistic evolution and Blaise

Embracing complexity Nigel Santos on the messiness of real life romance, and Open Endings

Alone together Park Joon-ho on loneliness, North Korean experience, gay life and 3670

The destroyer of worlds Daniel Everitt-Lock on experiences of atomic testing and Our Planet, The People, My Blood

Taking the temperature Jacqueline Zünd on exploring the climate crisis through companion films Heat and Don't Let The Sun

More news and features

We're bringing you news, reviews and more from Cannes and Queer East.



We've recently brought you coverage of the San Francisco Independent Film Festival, Visions du Réel, Fantaspoa, Overlook, BFI Flare and SXSW, the Thessaloniki International Documentary Festival, the NY Rendezvous with French Cinema, the Glasgow Film Festival, the Berlinale, Sundance and Palm Springs.



Read our full for more.


Visit our festivals section.

Interact

Don't forget that you can follow us on YouTube for trailers of festival films and more. You can also find us on Mastodon and Bluesky.


It's a busy time for festivals and here's the latest:


Cannes Paul Laverty, Demi Moore, Park Chan-Wook and others speak out


Cannes Honorary Palme d'Or for Peter Jackson


Cannes Festival to host 25th anniversary screening of The Fast And The Furious, as Classics also announced


Fantasia First wave of titles announced


Cannes Monia Chokri heads Caméra d’Or jury


Cannes Announces full jury