BAFTA has announced its nominees for this year’s film awards, which take place on 19 February.
Everything Everywhere All At Once, The Banshees Of Inisherin, All Quiet On The Western Front and Elvis are among the films up for BAFTA awards in 2023, while Colin Farrell, Ana de Armas, Viola Davis, Cate Blanchett, Brendan Fraser and Bill Nighy are among the acting nominees.
You can read our full story on the stars and movies leading the pack here – and scroll down for the full list of which stars and what films are up for each prize.
BEST FILM
Image: Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell reunite in The Banshees of Inisherin. Pic: 20th Century Studios
All Quiet On The Western Front – Malte Grunert The Banshees Of Inisherin – Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin, Martin McDonagh Elvis – Gail Berman, Baz Luhrmann, Catherine Martin, Patrick McCormick, Schuyler Weiss Everything Everywhere All At Once – Daniel Kwan, Daniel Scheinert, Jonathan Wang Tar – Todd Field, Scott Lambert, Alexandra Milchan
OUTSTANDING BRITISH FILM
Image: The Swimmers is among the best British film contenders. Pic: Laura Radford/Netflix
Aftersun – Charlotte Wells The Banshees Of Inisherin – Martin McDonagh, Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin Brian and Charles – Jim Archer, Rupert Majendie, David Earl, Chris Hayward Empire Of Light – Sam Mendes, Pippa Harris Good Luck To You, Leo Grande – Sophie Hyde, Debbie Gray, Adrian Politowski, Katy Brand Living – Oliver Hermanus, Elizabeth Karlsen, Stephen Woolley, Kazuo Ishiguro Roald Dahl’s Matilda The Musical – Matthew Warchus, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Jon Finn, Luke Kelly, Dennis Kelly See How They Run – Tom George, Gina Carter, Damian Jones, Mark Chappell The Swimmers – Sally El Hosaini, Jack Thorne The Wonder – Sebastian Lelio, Ed Guiney, Juliette Howell, Andrew Lowe, Tessa Ross, Alice Birch, Emma Donoghue
OUTSTANDING DEBUT BY A BRITISH WRITER, DIRECTOR OR PRODUCER
Image: Emma Thompson and Daryl McCormack in Good Luck To You, Leo Grande. Pic: Lionsgate/ Nick Wall
Aftersun – Charlotte Wells (writer/director) Blue Jean – Georgia Oakley (writer/director), Helene Sifre (producer) Electric Malady – Marie Liden (director) Good Luck To You, Leo Grande – Katy Brand (writer) Rebellion – Maia Kenworthy (director)
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FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
Image: All Quiet On The Western Front is the most-nominated film. Pic: Netflix/ Reiner Bajo
All Quiet On The Western Front – Edward Berger, Malte Grunert Argentina – 1985 Santiago Mitre Corsage – Marie Kreutzer Decision To Leave – Park Chan-wook, Ko Dae-seok The Quiet Girl – Colm Bairead, Cleona Ni Chrualaoi
DOCUMENTARY
Image: Moonage Daydream, about David Bowie, is up for best documentary
All That Breathers – Shaunak Sen, Teddy Leifer, Aman Mann All The Beauty And The Bloodshed – Laura Poitras, Howard Gertler, Nan Goldin, Yoni Golijov, John Lyons Fire Of Love – Sara Dosa, Shane Boris, Ina Fichman Moonage Daydream – Brett Morgan Navalny – Daniel Roher, Diane Becker, Shane Boris, Melanie Miller, Odessa Rae
ANIMATED FILM Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio – Guillermo del Toro, Mark Gustafson, Gary Ungar, Alex Bulkley Marcel The Shell With Shoes On – Dean Fleisher Camp, Andrew Goldman, Elisabeth Holm, Caroline Kaplan, Paul Mezey Puss In Boots: The Last Wish – Joel Crawford, Mark Swift Turning Red – Domee Shi, Lindsey Collins
DIRECTOR
Image: The Woman King. Pic: Sony Pictures
All Quiet On The Western Front – Edward Berger The Banshees Of Inisherin – Martin McDonagh Decision To Leave – Park Chan-wook Everything Everywhere All At Once – Daniel Kwan, Daniel Scheinert Tar – Todd Field The Woman King – Gina Prince-Bythewood
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Image: Michelle Williams and Paul Dano star in Steven Spielberg’s The Fabelmans. Pic: Universal Pictures
The Banshees Of Inisherin – Martin McDonagh Everything Everywhere All At Once – Daniel Kwan, Daniel Scheinert The Fabelmans – Tony Kushner, Steven Spielberg Tar – Todd Field Triangle Of Sadness – Ruben Ostlund
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Image: Bill Nighy in Living. Pic: Sony Pictures
All Quiet On The Western Front – Edward Berger, Lesley Paterson, Ian Stokell Living – Kazuo Ishiguro The Quiet Girl – Colm Bairead She Said – Rebecca Lenkiewicz The Whale – Samuel D Hunter
LEADING ACTRESS
Image: Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, and Stephanie Hsu in Everything Everywhere All At Once. Pic: A24
Cate Blanchett – Tar Viola Davis – The Woman King Danielle Deadwyler – Till Ana de Armas – Blonde Emma Thompson – Good Luck To You, Leo Grande Michelle Yeoh – Everything Everywhere All At Once
LEADING ACTOR
Image: Brendan Fraser in The Whale. Pic: A24
Austin Butler – Elvis Colin Farrell The Banshees of Inisherin Brendan Fraser – The Whale Daryl McCormack – Good Luck to You, Leo Grande Paul Mescal – Aftersun Bill Nighy – Living
SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Image: She Said tells the story of the article that led to Harvey Weinstein’s downfall back in October 2017. Pic: Universal
Angela Bassett – Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Hong Chau – The Whale Kerry Condon – The Banshees of Inisherin Dolly De Leon – Triangle of Sadness Jamie Lee Curtis – Everything Everywhere All At Once Carey Mulligan – She Said
SUPPORTING ACTOR
Image: Eddie Redmayne as Charlie Cullen and Jessica Chastain as Amy Loughren in The Good Nurse. Pic: JoJo Whilden / Netflix
Brendan Gleeson –The Banshees of Inisherin Barry Keoghan – The Banshees of Inisherin Ke Huy Quan – Everything Everywhere All At Once Eddie Redmayne – The Good Nurse Albrecht Schuch – All Quiet On The Western Front Micheal Ward – Empire Of Light
ORIGINAL SCORE All Quiet On The Western Front – Volker Bertelmann Babylon – Justin Hurwitz The Banshees Of Inisherin – Carter Burwell Everything Everywhere All At Once – Son Lux Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio – Alexandre Desplat
CASTING
Image: Charlbi Dean in Triangle Of Sadness. Pic: Lionsgate
Aftersun – Lucy Pardee All Quiet On The Western Front – Simone Bar Elvis – Nikki Barrett, Denise Chamian Everything Everywhere All At Once – Sarah Halley Finn Triangle Of Sadness – Pauline Hansson
EDITING All Quiet On The Western Front – Sven Budelmann The Banshees Of Inisherin – Mikkel EG Nielsen Elvis – Jonathan Redmond, Matt Villa Everything Everywhere All At Once – Paul Rogers Top Gun: Maverick – Eddie Hamilton
CINEMATOGRAPHY
Image: Tom Cruise returned as Maverick in the Top Gun sequel. Pic: Paramount Pictures, Skydance and Jerry Bruckheimer Films.
All Quiet On The Western Front – James Friend The Batman – Greig Fraser Elvis – Mandy Walker Empire Of Light – Roger Deakins Top Gun: Maverick – Claudio Miranda
MAKE UP & HAIR All Quiet On The Western Front – Heike Merker The Batman – Naomi Donne, Mike Marino, Zoe Tahir Elvis – Jason Baird, Mark Coulier, Louise Coulston, Shane Thomas Roald Dahl’s Matilda The Musical – Naomi Donne, Barrie Gower, Sharon Martin The Whale – Anne Marie Bradley, Judy Chin, Adrien Morot
PRODUCTION DESIGN
Image: Zoe Kravitz as Selina Kyle and Robert Pattinson as Batman in The Batman. Pic: Jonathan Olley/DC Comics/Warner Bros
All Quiet On The Western Front – Christian M Goldbreck, Ernestine Hipper Babylon – Florencia Martin, Anthony Carlino The Batman – James Chinlund, Lee Sandales Elvis – Catherine Martin, Karen Murphy, Bev Dunn Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio – Curt Enderle, Guy Davis
COSTUME DESIGN All Quiet On The Western Front – Lisy Christl Amsterdam – JR Hawbaker, Albert Wolsky Babylon – Mary Zophres Elvis – Catherine Martin Mrs Harris Goes To Paris – Jenny Beavan
SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
Image: Pic: 20th Century Studios
All Quiet On The Western Front – Markus Frank, Kamil Jafar, Viktor Muller, Frank Petzoid Avatar: The Way Of Water – Richard Baneham, Daniel Barrett, Joe Letteri, Eric Saindon The Batman – Russell Earl, Dan Lemmon, Anders Langlands, Dominic Tuohy Everything Everywhere All At Once – Benjamin Brewer, Ethan Feldbau, Jonathan Kombrinck, Zak Stoltz Top Gun: Maverick – Seth Hill, Scott R Fisher, Bryan Litson, Ryan Tudhope
SOUND All Quiet On The Western Front – Lars Ginzsel, Frank Kruse, Viktor Prasil, Markus Stemler Avatar: The Way Of Water – Christopher Boyes, Michael Hedges, Julian Howarth, Gary Summers, Gwendoyln Yates Whittle Elvis – Michael Keller, David Lee, Andy Nelson, Wayne Pashley Tar – Deb Adair, Stephen Griffiths, Andy Shelley, Steve Single, Roland Winke Top Gun: Maverick – Chris Burdon, James H Mather, Al Nelson, Mark Taylor, Mark Weingarten
RISING STAR AWARD (voted for by the public)
Image: Sheila Atim (left), Daryl McCormack and Naomi Ackie are among the rising star nominees
BRITISH SHORT ANIMATION The Boy, The Mole, The Fox And The Horse – Peter Baynton, Charlie Mackesy, Cara Speller, Hannah Minghella Middle Watch – John Stevenson, Aiesha Penwarden, Giles Healy Your Mountain Is Waiting – Hannah Jacobs, Zoe Muslim, Harriet Gillian
BRITISH SHORT FILM The Ballad Of Olive Morris – Alex Kayode-Kay Bazigaga – Jo Ingabire Moys, Stephanie Charmail Bus Girl – Jessica Henwick, Louise Palmkvist Hansen A Drifting Up – Jacob Lee An Irish Goodbye – Tom Berkeley, Ross White
Donald Trump has threatened to sue the BBC for $1bn over edits the organisation made last year to one of his speeches.
The organisation has been engulfed in a crisis, forced to apologise on Monday after two of its most senior figures, including the director-general, resigned on Sunday night.
The defamation claim centres around a BBC Panorama documentary, which aired October 2024 and showed an edited speech made by Mr Trump before the attack on the US Capitol on 6 January 2021, in which he appeared to tell his supporters he was going to walk with them to the US Capitol and “fight like hell”.
In a letter dated 9 November, Florida-based lawyer Alejandro Brito set the BBC a deadline of 10pm UK time on Friday to respond, outlining three demands:
• Issue a “full and fair retraction” of the documentary • Apologise immediately • “Appropriately compensate” the US president
He told the BBC it needed to “comply” or face being sued for $1bn.
A BBC spokesperson said: “We will review the letter and respond directly in due course.”
‘Error of judgement’
On Monday, BBC chairman Samir Shah, one of the most senior figures still standing, apologised for the “error of judgement” in editing the video.
In a letter to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee of MPs, Mr Shah said Mr Trump’s speech was edited in a way that gave “the impression of a direct call for violent action”.
“The BBC would like to apologise for that error of judgement,” he added.
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3:09
BBC admits Trump documentary ‘mistake’
Director-general and head of BBC News resign
Concerns about the edited speech first came to light in a leaked memo from Michael Prescott, a former journalist and independent adviser to the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines and Standards Board.
As a result, BBC director-general Tim Davie and BBC News chief Deborah Turness announced their resignations on Sunday evening, saying in emails to staff that mistakes had been made.
Mr Davie will address an all-staff meeting on Tuesday. While on her way into the Broadcasting House on Monday morning, Ms Turness defended the corporation, rejecting accusations of institutional bias.
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1:14
Trump’s claims of ‘corrupt’ BBC journalists rejected
Downing St stands by BBC – but chancellor says ‘lessons to be learned’
A spokesperson for the prime minister told reporters on Monday that the BBC wasn’t corrupt or institutionally biased.
Instead, they said it had a “vital role” to play in the modern age, but needed to ensure it acted “to maintain trust and correct mistakes quickly when they occur”.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves also stood by the corporation, but said that “lessons do need to be learned”.
‘Nothing but an apology’
Veteran broadcaster and former BBC presenter Jonathan Dimbleby told Sky News, however, that the organisation owed the US president nothing more than an apology.
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7:35
‘These are very serious times for the BBC’
But former legal correspondent for the BBC Joshua Rozenberg also told Sky News that he believed the corporation would “very likely” consider settling with Trump.
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6:00
BBC ‘very likely to consider settling with Trump best thing to do’
BBC chair Samir Shah has written a detailed letter to MPs following controversy over the editing of a speech by Donald Trump.
Following a backlash, both BBC director-general Tim Davie and BBC News chief executive Deborah Turness have both stepped down from their roles.
Mr Trump is also understood to have threatened the corporation with legal action over the editing together of two pieces of video from his speech on 6 January 2021 in the BBC’s flagship late-night news programme Panorama.
While the original programme received no complaints, Mr Shah confirmed in his letter that over 500 complaints had been received since a memo from former independent adviser to the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines and Standards Board, Michael Prescott, was leaked to The Daily Telegraph.
In his memo, Mr Prescott detailed what he called “worrying systemic issues with the BBC’s coverage”, also discussing other coverage, including trans issues, and the war in Gaza.
Mr Prescott specifically mentioned Ms Turness and deputy director of BBC News, Jonathan Munro in his memo, calling them “defensive”.
Image: File pic: AP
An apology – by denial of a cover-up
In his four-page letter of response to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee, Mr Shah said following “deliberation”, the board “accept that the way Mr Trump’s speech was edited did give the impression of a direct call for violent action”, calling it an “error of judgement”.
He also noted that some coverage of the memo leak, implied a list of stories and issues had been “uncovered”, which the BBC had sought to “bury”.
Mr Shah said that interpretation was “simply not true” and urged for a “sense of perspective” to be maintained when considering the “thousands of hours of outstanding journalism” the BBC produces each year.
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5:34
‘Trump is undermining the BBC ‘
Changes in leadership
The BBC chair also said the view that the BBC “has done nothing to tackle these problems” is “simply not true”.
Mr Shah admitted there were occasions “when the BBC gets things wrong” or “reporting requires more context or explanation”.
Raising the point that the information relied on by Mr Prescott for his memo was the very research commissioned by the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines and Standards Committee (EGSC), he said the memo “did not present a full picture of the discussions, decisions and actions that were taken”.
Mr Shah detailed changes in leadership across the BBC Arabic team, as well as changes in World Service and BBC News – all of which he said would help tackle the issues raised.
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0:47
BBC boss ‘right to resign’
So what is being done?
At the end of the letter Mr Shah committed to three actions:
• “The board will commit to revisiting each and every item set out in Michael Prescott’s note and take further action where appropriate. We will be transparent about the conclusions we reach, and the actions taken.”
• “Where we have put in measures already, in response to the original EGSC research, we will repeat those internal reviews to check the changes made are making material improvements to the output.”
• “Where we have already accepted that items fall short of our editorial standards, we will ensure that amendments to the relevant online stories are made where this was deemed appropriate.”
Mr Shah concluded by saying the BBC would “champion impartiality”, which he said was “more necessary now than ever before”, calling it the “sacred job of the BBC”.
Former Radio 1 DJ Tim Westwood has been granted conditional bail during a court appearance to face charges of rape and sexual assault.
The 68-year-old is accused of offences against seven women, including three indecent assaults at the BBC studios in the 1990s.
Westwood, wearing a dark grey shirt, spoke only to confirm his name, date of birth and address as he appeared in the dock at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Monday.
The former BBC DJ, who returned to the UK from Nigeria last week, was not required to enter pleas to any of the charges at this stage.
He has attended five police interviews voluntarily since the investigation into the alleged offences began, the court heard.
Westwood has previously denied all allegations of sexual misconduct made against him.
Chief Magistrate Paul Goldspring granted bail on the condition that he does not contact prosecution witnesses, and set his next court appearance at Southwark Crown Court for 8 December.
The charges
Westwood is charged with four counts of rape, nine counts of indecent assault and two counts of sexual assault.
These include an allegation of rape against a woman at a hotel in London in 1996, one count of rape from the early 2000s at an address in London, and two counts of rape at an address in London in the 2010s.
He is further accused of four indecent assaults in London in the 1980s, three indecent assaults at the BBC in the 1990s, and two indecent assaults in the early 2000s.
The former DJ is also alleged to have sexually assaulted a woman at a nightclub in Stroud, Gloucestershire, in 2010, and faces a second sexual assault charge against a woman at a music festival in London in the 2010s.
Westwood began his broadcasting career in local radio before joining Capital Radio in the late 1980s.
He moved to the BBC in 1994, working on Radio 1 and Radio 1Xtra for almost 20 years.
After leaving the BBC in 2013, he then joined Capital Xtra, hosting a regular Saturday show where he was referred to as “The Big Dawg”, before he left the company in 2022.