Tag: Stanley Kubrick

  • Mike Leigh to be honoured with BAFTA Fellowship

    Mike Leigh to be honoured with BAFTA Fellowship

    MUMBAI: On 8 February, the British Academy of Film and Television Arts will present Mike Leigh with the Fellowship at the EE British Academy Film Awards ceremony at the Royal Opera House, London.

     

    Awarded annually, the Fellowship is the highest accolade bestowed by BAFTA upon an individual in recognition of an outstanding and exceptional contribution to film, television or games.

     

    Fellows previously honoured for their work in film include Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Steven Spielberg, Sean Connery, Elizabeth Taylor, Stanley Kubrick, Anthony Hopkins, Laurence Olivier, Judi Dench, Vanessa Redgrave, Christopher Lee, Martin Scorsese and Alan Parker. Helen Mirren received the Fellowship at last year’s Film Awards.

     

    Leigh said, “What a privilege to be honoured with the BAFTA Fellowship. I’m moved, delighted and surprised.”

     

    BAFTA chief executive officer Amanda Berry OBE added, “Mike Leigh is one of Britain’s finest filmmakers, so I am delighted that we will honour him with the Fellowship, recognising his outstanding and exceptional contribution to film, at this Sunday’s EE British Academy Film Awards. He is a true innovator, an artist and an exceptional filmmaker, which is why last year the Film Committee voted unanimously to award him the Fellowship, the highest honour that BAFTA bestows. We look forward to celebrating his remarkable career.”

     

    A day before the ceremony, Leigh will join a number of close colleagues and friends at a special BAFTA lunch held in his honour at the Awards’ Official Hotel, The Savoy. The lunch will be hosted by Jeremy Hackett of Hackett London, BAFTA’s Official Menswear partner.

     

    Writer-director Leigh trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, at the Camberwell and Central Schools of Art and at the London Film School, of which he is now the chairman.

     

    Leigh’s award-winning career features three BAFTA wins, a BAFTA Special Award for Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema and a John Schlesinger Britannia Award for Excellence from BAFTA Los Angeles last year, as well as a further 11 BAFTA nominations. He has seven Academy Award nominations and has been celebrated in Cannes, winning the prestigious Palme D’Or for Secrets & Lies, and at Venice, where Vera Drake won the Golden Lion.

     

    Leigh’s first feature film was Bleak Moments; this was followed by the full-length television films Hard Labour, Nuts In May, The Kiss of Death, Who’s Who, Grown-Ups, Home Sweet Home, Meantime and Four Days In July, as well as the television studio version of Abigail’s Party.

     

    Leigh’s other feature films are BAFTA-nominated Naked and BAFTA-winning Secrets & Lies (for Outstanding British Film and Original Screenplay), which also received five Academy Award nominations and two Golden Globe nominations, and Career Girls, Topsy-Turvy, All Or Nothing, Vera Drake (for which he won BAFTA for director), Happy-Go-Lucky and Another Year. Most recently he has written and directed Mr. Turner, which received four nominations at this year’s EE British Academy Film Awards and four Academy Award nominations.

     

    Leigh has also written and directed over twenty stage plays, which include Babies Grow Old, Abigail’s Party, Ecstasy, Goose-Pimples, Smelling A Rat, Greek.

  • Life of Pi to open New York Fest; Nicole Kidman to be honoured

    Life of Pi to open New York Fest; Nicole Kidman to be honoured

    MUMBAI: Ang Lee‘s Life of Pi will be the opening film of the New York Film Festival. With this, it will be the first time ever that a 3D movie has been chosen to open the festival.
    Another notable thing that is going to happen at the festival would be that Oscar-winning star Nicole Kidman would be honoured by the festival authorities.

    Said festival director Richard Pena, “Nicole Kidman is one of the finest contemporary actresses. Since her breakthrough performance in To Die For and her bold and provocative appearances in Lars Von Trier‘s Dogville, Stanley Kubrick‘s Eyes Wide Shut, her award-winning portrayal of Virginia Wolf in Stephen Daldry‘s The Hours, the actress has been demanding complex, bold and demanding roles for herself. We are excited to honor her with a tribute at the New York Film Festival.”
    Being dubbed as one of film‘s finest contemporary actresses, the actress will be honoured with a gala tribute at the event on October 3.
    The New York Film Festival will get underway from 28 September, will close on 14 October.

  • Hitchcock’s Vertigo ranked no 1 in list of 10 greatest films

    Hitchcock’s Vertigo ranked no 1 in list of 10 greatest films

    Mumbai: Alfred Hitchcock has finally upstaged Orson Welles. Hitchcock‘s Vertigo has taken the top spot in the 10 greatest-movies-ever list compiled by Sight and Sound ending the 50-year-long run of Welles‘ Citizen Kane.
    Citizen Kane slid to the second spot, making way for Hitchcock‘s 1958 psychological drama starring James Stewart and Kim Novak.
    Yasujiro Ozu‘s Tokyo Story has been ranked third followed by Jean Renoir‘s Rules of the Game, F.W. Murnau‘s Sunrise, Stanley Kubrick‘s 2001: A Space Odyssey and John Ford‘s The Searchers. Carl Dreyer‘s The Passion of Joan of Arc ranks ninth followed by Federico Fellini‘s 8 1/2.
    The list also includes a new addition: Dziga Vertov‘s documentary Man With a Movie Camera that comes in at eighth place.
    Interestingly, Satyajit Ray‘s 1955 classic Pather Panchali has been featured in the 50 greatest films of all time list. The film was made on a shoestring budget of Rs 150,000 and featured mostly amateur actors but it is Ray‘s most famous film.
    With 31 votes, the Ray film came at the 42 place in the Sight & Sound poll.
    Some 846 critics, programmers, academics and distributors voted the best 50 films from the world cinema in the poll, which takes place once in a decade.
    The magazine, published by the British Film Institute, surveys international film critics every decade.

  • Scorsese to receive BAFTA honour

    Scorsese to receive BAFTA honour

    MUMBAI: The British Academy of Film and Television Arts will decide filmmaker Martin Scorsese with the BAFTA Fellowship for his contribution to cinema.
     
    Said British Academy of Film and Television Arts chairman Tim Corrie, “Martin Scorsese is a legend in his lifetime; a true inspiration to all young directors the world over.
     
    We are delighted to honour his contribution to cinema history and look forward to paying tribute to him in London on February 12.”
     
    The 69-year-old director, who last year released his first family film Hugo, will join the likes of Stanley Kubrick, Steven Spielberg and Judi Dench next month by receiving the accolade given to those who provide an exceptional contribution to film, it is understood.


    “It is a great honour to be recognized by the British Academy and to join the ranks of such an esteemed group of industry colleagues and friends,” commented Scorsese after hearing the news of the BAFTA honour.


    The BAFTA Awards ceremony will be held on February 12.

  • Andy Whitfield ‘Spartacus’ no more

    Andy Whitfield ‘Spartacus’ no more

    MUMBAI: 39-year old Andy Whitfield, who is known for Spartacus: Blood and Sand has expired in Sydney. His death came 18 months after he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma, it is understood.


    “On a beautiful sunny Sydney spring morning, surrounded by his family, in the arms of his loving wife, our beautiful young warrior Andy Whitfield lost his 18 month battle with lymphoma cancer,” Whitfield‘s wife Vashti has been quoted in a statement.
    “He passed peacefully surrounded by love. Thank you to all his fans whose love and support have help carry him to this point. He will be remembered as the inspiring, courageous and gentle man, father and husband he was,” she added.
     
    Andy Whitfield – who was born in Wales and moved to Australia in 1999 – was a virtual unknown when he was cast as the legendary Thracian slave in Spartacus, a role made
    famous by Kirk Douglas in the 1960 Stanley Kubrick film.
     
    In all, the actor appeared in all 13 episodes of the first season that aired in 2010 and was preparing to shoot the second when he was diagnosed with Cancer.