Advertisement

‘Argo’ named best film at the BAFTA awards

Share

Director-producer-star Ben Affleck’s historical drama “Argo” continued its late-inning awards sweep Sunday, winning a British Academy of Film and Television Arts award for best film.

Although snubbed by 2013 Oscar balloters in the best director category, Affleck also clinched a BAFTA for directing in a year that saw Steven Spielberg (“Lincoln”) and “Les Misérables” director Tom Hooper shut out of the British Academy’s film awards.

‘Argo’ collected three BAFTAs in all, including William Goldenberg’s win for editing. “Lincoln,” meanwhile -- the odds-on BAFTA favorite with 10 nominations heading into Sunday’s event -- walked off with a single prize: Daniel Day-Lewis’ win for leading actor.

Advertisement

Oscars 2013: Oscar Watch | Play-at-Home Ballot | Snubs & surprises | Reactions | Trivia | Timeline

In the leading actress category, BAFTA voters honored age over beauty, with 85-year old “Amour” star Emmanuelle Riva trumping her glamazon competition -- “Silver Linings Playbook” co-lead Jennifer Lawrence, “Zero Darky Thirty” star Jessica Chastain, “Rust and Bone’s” Marion Cotillard and the relatively youthful 67-year old Helen Mirren, nominated for her turn in “Hitchcock.”

Austrian actor Christoph Waltz landed a supporting actor BAFTA for his performance as dentist-turned-bounty hunter King Schultz in the slave revenge caper-spaghetti western “Django Unchained.” He edged out “Argo’s” Alan Arkin, “The Master” co-star Philip Seymour Hoffman and Javier Bardem’s bow as a Bond villain in “Skyfall.”

Presenter George Clooney handed the supporting actress statuette to Anne Hathaway for her turn as the forelorn prostitute Fantine in “Les Misérables.” Hathaway bested Amy Adams’ performance in “The Master,” Judi Dench in “Skyfall” and Helen Hunt’s turn as a sex surrogate in “The Sessions” for the win.

David O. Russell earned the BAFTA for adapted screenplay for “Silver Linings Playbook,” and Quentin Tarantino was honored for original screenplay for “Django Unchained.”

Pixar Animation’s “Brave” nabbed an award for animated feature. And “Searching for Sugarman,” about the rise, descent into obscurity and pop cultural resurrection of the folk-rock performer Rodriguez, claimed the BAFTA for documentary.

Advertisement

ALSO:

‘Argo’ writer Chris Terrio on Affleck collaboration

‘Zero Dark Thirty,’ ‘Lincoln,’ ‘Flight’ nominated for WGA awards

‘Lincoln’ writer Tony Kushner on working with Steven Spielberg

chris.lee@latimes.com

Twitter: @__chrislee

Advertisement

PHOTOS AND MORE

VIDEO: The making of ‘Argo,’ ‘Les Miz’ and more


ENVELOPE: The latest awards buzz


PHOTOS: NC-17 movies: Ratings explained


Advertisement