The Province

Three Billboards lights up BAFTAs

Spotlight also shines on burgeoning campaign to end sexual harassment, abuse against women in film

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — The ferocious femaleled tragicomed­y Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri was the big winner at the British Academy Film Awards in London, where women demanding an end to harassment, abuse and inequality dominated the ceremony.

Martin McDonagh’s film about a bereaved mother seeking justice won five trophies Sunday, including best film, outstandin­g British film and best actress, for Frances McDormand.

Producer Graham Broadbent said the movie is “the story of a woman taking on the establishm­ent and status quo.”

“It seems more timely now than we could ever have imagined,” he said.

Writer-director McDonagh said it was fitting, in the year of the Time’s Up campaign against sexual harassment, that Three Billboards is “a film about a woman who refuses to take any s--- anymore.”

“Our film is a hopeful one in lots of ways, but it’s also an angry one,” McDonagh said. “As we’ve seen this year, sometimes anger is the only way to get people to listen and to change.”

McDonagh won the original screenplay prize for Three Billboards, which also netted Sam Rockwell the supporting actor trophy. Allison Janney was named best supporting actress for playing ice skater Tonya Harding’s domineerin­g mother in I, Tonya.

Guillermo del Toro won the directing prize for the monster fantasy The Shape of Water, which also took trophies for music and production design. Three Canadians — Paul Austerberr­y, Jeff Melvin and Shane Vieau — shared the production design award.

Gary Oldman, the favourite among bookies, won the best actor prize for playing wartime British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in Darkest Hour.

The British prizes, more commonly known as BAFTAs, are considered a key indicator of likely success at Oscars, which will be handed out on March 4.

The film awards season in the United States and elsewhere has been overshadow­ed by the allegation­s of sexual harassment and abuse levelled at scores of enter-

tainment figures since women began coming forward to accuse Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein last year.

London’s Old Vic Theatre has been rocked by allegation­s against former artistic director Kevin Spacey. London police are also investigat­ing nine claims of sexual assault by Weinstein.

The red carpet and the auditorium at London’s Royal Albert Hall were a sea of black, as actresses such as Lupita Nyong’o, Angelina Jolie, Jennifer Lawrence and Margot Robbie eschewed colour as a statement against sexual misconduct and gender inequality.

Several actresses brought feminist activists as guests, and men showed solidarity with Time’s Up lapel pins.

McDormand opted to wear black

and red rather than all black, and noted: “I have a little trouble with compliance.”

“But I want you to know that I stand in full solidarity with my sisters tonight in black,” she said.

On the red carpet, actress Andrea Riseboroug­h, who brought U.K. Black Pride founder Phyll Opoku-Gyimah as her guest, said she also hoped the film industry was on the road to greater equality and diversity.

“It’s more likely we’ll see an alien onscreen than we’ll see an Asian woman at the moment, which is disgracefu­l,” Riseboroug­h said.

Prince William — the British Academy’s president — and the Duchess of Cambridge were guests of honour at Sunday’s ceremony, hosted by Absolutely Fabulous

star Joanna Lumley. Kate acknowledg­ed the evening’s muted fashion by wearing a dark green Jenny Packham dress with black belt.

The call to wear black put Kate in a delicate position, because the Royal Family is careful to avoid political statements.

Ahead of the ceremony, almost 200 British women in entertainm­ent called Sunday for an internatio­nal movement to end sexual misconduct.

Kate Winslet, Emma Thompson, Naomie Harris, Emma Watson and Gemma Arterton were among signatorie­s to a letter saying that 2018 should be “the year that time was up on sexual harassment and abuse.”

The stars called for an end to impunity for abusers and announced a fund to support women

and men battling workplace abuse, modelled on the Time’s Up movement in the U.S. Former Harry Potter star Watson has given the fund 1 million pounds (US$1.4 million), according to its page on the Go Fund Me website.

The BAFTA ceremony honoured several generation­s of talent. Filmmaker James Ivory, 89, took the adapted screenplay prize for Call Me By Your Name.

Director Ridley Scott, 80, whose films include Blade Runner, Alien, Thelma and Louise and Gladiator, received the academy’s highest honour, the BAFTA Fellowship.

Daniel Kaluuya, the British star of Get Out, won the rising star award and made a plea for public arts funding, which helped him get his start.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Writer-director Martin McDonagh, left — sharing one of five BAFTA wins along with producer Peter Czernin, actors Sam Rockwell, Frances McDormand and producer Graham Broadbent — calls the film ‘hopeful’ but ‘also an angry one.’
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Writer-director Martin McDonagh, left — sharing one of five BAFTA wins along with producer Peter Czernin, actors Sam Rockwell, Frances McDormand and producer Graham Broadbent — calls the film ‘hopeful’ but ‘also an angry one.’

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