'One Battle After Another' wins big at Britain's Bafta film awards


By AGENCY
(From left)_ Andy Jurgensen, Leonardo DiCaprio, Teyana Taylor, and Paul Thomas Anderson pose with the awards for best director, cinematography, and adapted screenplay for 'One Battle After Another' at the 79th British Academy Film Awards, in London, Sunday, Feb 22, 2026. Photo: AP

Dark comedy "One Battle After Another" was the big winner at Britain's top movie awards on Sunday, picking up six Baftas including best film and best director for Paul Thomas Anderson.

It beat home favourite, the tearjerker "Hamnet", and vampire thriller "Sinners", which has a record number of Oscar nominations, in the big two categories in the ceremony, where Prince William and Princess Kate were guests of honour.

"We have a line from Nina Simone that we stole in our film. She says 'I know what freedom is, it's no fear'," Anderson said.

"So let's keep making things without fear, it's a good idea."

Anderson also picked up the award for best adapted screenplay, while Sean Penn beat his co-star Benicio del Toro among others for best supporting actor.

The critical hit also won best cinematography and best editing to total six prizes.

"Sinners", which has 16 Oscar nods, won best original screenplay for writer and director Ryan Coogler, best supporting actress for Wunmi Mosaku, and best original score.

The biggest surprise was Robert Aramayo beating Timothee Chalamet, Leonardo DiCaprio, Michael B. Jordan, Ethan Hawke and Jesse Plemons to win best actor for his acclaimed performance as Tourette syndrome campaigner John Davidson in "I Swear".

He accepted the award - his second of the evening after picking up the rising star prize - in tears, saying "I absolutely can't believe it."

Asked before the ceremony what it would mean to him to win, Aramayo told Reuters: "I haven't even engaged with that thought to be honest with you, I just feel really, really lucky to be on that list of names."

Favourite Jessie Buckley won best actress for playing Agnes, the wife of William Shakespeare, in "Hamnet", based on the novel by Maggie O'Farrell and directed by previous Oscar winner Chloe Zhao.

The film also won outstanding British film, but it lost out on the two major awards, including best film, where its home advantage had made it a favourite.

The awards, hosted by Alan Cumming, were the first joint engagement for William and Kate since William's uncle Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested on Thursday.

William, president of the film academy, presented the Bafta Fellowship to Donna Langley, studio head at NBCUniversal. - Reuters

 

 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Entertainment

Fans spot George Lam feeding Sally Yeh ice cream in KL ahead of their Malaysia concert
Bruce Johnston leaves the Beach Boys after 60 years
He'll be back: Arnold Schwarzenegger, 78, ready to reprise ‘Conan’ role
Amira Othman's first Raya after marriage inspires new song 'Bincang Raya'
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce plan to marry by July
Rihanna ‘freaking out’ after woman opens fire on her home
Mother of actress Ida Nerina, Marina Md Yusoff passes away
Aaron Kwok, 60, jokes about not looking his age: 'Is my ID card wrong?'
K-drama�actor Lim Ju-hwan spotted working at logistics company�
Ngiaw wins award for ‘WondLa’ music direction

Others Also Read