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LONDON — Atom-bomb epic âOppenheimerâ could smash a 53-year-old record at the British Academy Film Awards on Sunday if it makes good on its field-leading 13 nominations.
Christopher Nolan âs biopic of physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer is up for trophies including best film, best director and best actor for star Cillian Murphy. A good night could see it surpass the record nine awards won by âButch Cassidy and the Sundance Kidâ in 1971.
It faces stiff competition from Gothic fantasia âPoor Things,â which has 11 nominations including best film, director for Yorgos Lanthimos and actress for Emma Stone. Historical epic âKillers of the Flower Moonâ and Holocaust drama â The Zone of Interestâ have nine nominations each for the prizes, officially called the EE BAFTA Film Awards.
â Barbie,â one half of 2023âs âBarbenheimerâ box office juggernaut and the yearâs top-grossing film, has five nominations but missed out on nods for best picture and best director. Many see the omission of âBarbieâ director Greta Gerwig â for both the BAFTAs and the Oscars â as a major snub.
The ceremony, hosted by âDoctor Whoâ star David Tennant, will be a glitzy, British-accented appetizer for Hollywoodâs Academy Awards, closely watched for hints about who might win at the Oscars on March 10.
Nominees including Bradley Cooper, Carey Mulligan, Emily Blunt, Robert Downey Jr., Rosamund Pike, Ryan Gosling and Ayo Edebiri are expected on the red carpet at Londonâs Royal Festival Hall, along with presenters that include Andrew Scott, Cate Blanchett, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Idris Elba.
Guest of honor will be Prince William, in his role as president of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Heâll be without his wife, Kate, who is recovering after abdominal surgery last month.
Other leading contenders include French courtroom drama âAnatomy of a Fall,â boarding school coming-of-age drama âThe Holdoversâ and Leonard Bernstein biopic âMaestroâ â each with seven nominations â and grief-flecked love story âAll of Us Strangersâ with six. Barbed class-war comedy âSaltburn â has five nominations.
The best film race pits âOppenheimerâ against âPoor Things,â âKillers of the Flower Moon,â âAnatomy of a Fallâ and âThe Holdovers.â
âPoor Thingsâ is also on the 10-strong list for the separate category of best British film, an eclectic slate that includes class-war dramedy âSaltburn,â imperial epic âNapoleon,â south London romcom âRye Laneâ and chocolatier origin story âWonka,â among others.
Britainâs film academy introduced changes to increase the awardsâ diversity in 2020, when no women were nominated as best director for the seventh year running and all 20 nominees in the lead and supporting performer categories were white. But there is only one woman among the six best-director nominees: Justine Triet for âAnatomy of a Fall.â Gerwig, Emerald Fennell for âSaltburnâ and Celine Song for star-crossed romance âPast Livesâ all failed to make the list.
A woman of color could take the best actress BAFTA for the first time, with Fantasia Barrino for âThe Color Purpleâ and Vivian Oparah for âRye Laneâ nominated alongside Sandra Hüller for âAnatomy of a Fall,â Mulligan for âMaestro,â Margot Robbie for âBarbieâ and Stone for âPoor Things.â
No British performers are nominated in the best-actor category, but Ireland is represented by Murphy for âOppenheimerâ and Barry Keoghan for âSaltburn.â Theyâre up against Cooper for âMaestro,â Colman Domingo for civil rights biopic âRustin,â Paul Giamatti for âThe Holdoversâ and Teo Yoo for âPast Lives.â
Harrowing Ukraine war documentary â20 Days in Mariupol,â produced by The Associated Press and PBS âFrontline,â is nominated for best documentary and best film not in the English language.
The ceremony is set to include musical performances by âTed Lassoâ star Hannah Waddingham and Sophie Ellis-Bextor, the latter singing her 2001 hit âMurder on the Dancefloor,â which shot back up the charts after featuring in âSaltburn.â
Samantha Morton will receive the academyâs highest honor, the BAFTA Fellowship, and film curator June Givanni, founder of the June Givanni PanAfrican Cinema Archive, will be honored for outstanding British contribution to cinema.
Sundayâs ceremony will be broadcast on BBC One in the U.K. from 1900GMT, and on streaming service BritBox in the U.S., Canada, Australia and South Africa.