HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentBAFTAs 2023: ‘All Quiet on the Western Front’ wins big

BAFTAs 2023: ‘All Quiet on the Western Front’ wins big

The German-language anti-war movie received seven awards including Best Picture and Best Director, a record for a foreign film.

February 20, 2023 / 10:23 IST
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A still from 'All Quiet on the Western Front', which won seven 2023 BAFTA awards, including Best Film. (Screen shot)
A still from 'All Quiet on the Western Front', which won seven 2023 BAFTA awards, including Best Film. (Screen shot)

Netflix’s All Quiet on the Western Front continued its record-breaking streak at the BAFTAs last night, taking home seven trophies (film, director, adapted screenplay, cinematography, sound, original score and non-English film) from 14 nominations (also a record for a non-English language film, tying Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon back in 2001). Martin McDonagh’s The Banshees of Inisherin and Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis were next tied at four wins apiece. Meanwhile the fairytale story of this awards season Everything Everywhere All At Once had a dismal showing, winning only one award for Editing despite an impressive 10 nominations.

This year, the BAFTAs took place at the Royal Festival Hall, a smaller and more intimate venue than its usual home, the Royal Albert Hall. The host, British actor Richard E. Grant did an admirable job of keeping the proceedings moving along, avoiding political jokes and controversy, save for a quick jab at last year’s Oscars saying: “Nobody on my watch gets slapped tonight”. The evening’s proceedings took a brief pause to honour Queen Elizabeth’s memory with a tribute from Dame Helen Mirren who had previously won a BAFTA and an Oscar for her performance as the late royal in The Queen (2006). The only brief hiccup was when Troy Katsur’s sign language translator mistakenly announced the Supporting Actress winner as Carey Mulligan (from She Said) instead of Kerry Condon.

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Cate Blanchett won her third Lead Actress BAFTA for her stunning performance as beleaguered conductor Lydia Tár in Todd Fields’ Tár. This is not good news for her closest challenger Everything Everywhere All At Once’s Michelle Yeoh who has to hope for a SAG win if she wants to keep her Oscar chances alive. Meanwhile, in a stunning upset Austin Butler won his first Lead Actor BAFTA for Elvis, beating out The Banshees of Inisherin’s Colin Farrell who was expected to have a huge home field advantage in the UK. Again, if Butler repeats at the SAG next weekend, this could signal the end of the Oscar road for both Farrell and early-season favourite Brendan Fraser for The Whale.

The Banshees of Inisherin did take home both supporting BAFTAs with surprising wins for Kerry Condon (over odds-on favourite Angela Bassett in Wakanda Forever) and Barry Keoghan (who triumphed over comeback sensation Ke Huy Quan from Everything Everywhere All At Once). The supporting wins are understood to be an outcome of the British nature of these awards and not expected to repeat at the Oscars