By Marie-Louise Gumuchian
LONDON (Reuters) – American recession drama “Nomadland” and British coming-of-age story “Rocks” lead nominations at this weekend’s BAFTA awards with seven nods each, but the race remains open with a list of contenders that shines the spotlight on diversity.
The British Academy of Film and Television Arts ceremony will be held virtually over two nights as the COVID-19 pandemic prevents the usual celebrity-packed show with a live audience.
Saturday’s opening will look at the creative process in film-making and will hand out several awards, organisers have said, while the main prizes will be announced on Sunday, when director Ang Lee will receive the BAFTA Fellowship.
After an outcry last year when BAFTA presented an all-white acting contenders list, more than half of this year’s 24 nominees are actors of colour.
Early awards season favourite “Nomadland”, about a community of van-dwellers, is in the running for best film, leading actress for its star Frances McDormand and best director for Chinese-born Chloe Zhao, one of the four women out of six nominees in that category.
The other best film contenders are 1960s Vietnam War protest drama “The Trial of the Chicago 7”, #Metoo revenge black comedy “Promising Young Woman”, dementia drama “The Father” and Guantanamo Bay movie “The Mauritanian”.
So far “Nomadland” and “The Trial of the Chicago 7” have won top prizes at the Golden Globes and Screen Actors Guild Awards respectively.
“Most years you have an idea and you’re not normally that far wrong because you’ve been watching momentum of certain films gather speed,” Alex Ritman, UK correspondent for The Hollywood Reporter, told Reuters.
“This year has been very peculiar and … I think we could get some surprises on the night.”
McDormand and Vanessa Kirby, who plays a grieving mother in “Pieces of a Woman”, are the only two leading actress contenders also nominated for an Oscar for those same roles.
BAFTA surprised many when it named Bukky Bakray for “Rocks”, Radha Blank for “The Forty-Year-Old Version”, Wunmi Mosaku for “His House” and Alfre Woodard for “Clemency” as their competition.
Leading actor nominees include Riz Ahmed, who plays a drummer going deaf in “Sound of Metal”, and the late Chadwick Boseman, who has won numerous prizes for portraying an ambitious trumpet player in “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom”.
Other nominees include Adarsh Gourav for “The White Tiger”, Anthony Hopkins for “The Father”, Mads Mikkelsen for “Another Round” and Tahar Rahim for “The Mauritanian”, one of several films BAFTA has recognised but which has been overlooked by other awards organisers.
“This year … saw BAFTA attempt to re-identify itself separately from its place in the Oscar race, handing over several major categories to nominating committees more concerned with artistry and diversity than following awards buzz from across the pond,” Hollywood publication Variety wrote.
(Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; editing by Barbara Lewis)