The Guardian (USA)

All of Us Strangers takes best film and director at British Independen­t Film Awards

- Catherine Shoard

All of Us Strangers, Andrew Haigh’s revolution­ary romance starring Andrew Scott as a screenwrit­er grappling with the death of his parents when he was a child, has taken best picture, best director and best screenplay at the British Independen­t Film Awards.

The film had already taken four prizes at the craft division of the Bifas last month, for editing, cinematogr­aphy, music supervisio­n and screenplay; it added three more at the ceremony at Old Billingsga­te in London on Sunday. As well as the wins for Haigh, Paul Mescal took best supporting actor for his performanc­e as a younger man who begins a relationsh­ip with Scott’s character.

The sweep gives a considerab­le boost to the awards momentum of a film that is emerging as Haigh’s mainstream breakthrou­gh, following plaudits for previous films including Weekend (2012) and 45 Years (2015). At the Gotham awards – broadly the US counterpar­t to the Bifas – last month, All of Us Strangers, which is released in the UK in January, went home emptyhande­d despite four nomination­s.

Meanwhile, Molly Manning Walker’s debut feature, How to Have Sex, won best lead performanc­e for Mia McKenna-Bruce,

who plays a 16-year-old navigating a wild and complicate­d summer holiday in Malia, while Shaun Thomas was – with Mescal – the joint winner of best supporting performanc­e for his turn as an empathetic young man. The film had already taken best casting at the craft awards.

Anatomy of a Fall, Justine Trier’s tense courtroom drama, which took the Palme d’Or at Cannes in May, won best internatio­nal feature; the film took the same prize, as well as best screenplay, at the Gothams.

Savanah Leaf, a former Olympic volleyball player, took best debut director for her drama about a pregnant single mother, Earth Mama, while

Nathan Stewart-Jarrett and George MacKay were presented with the best joint lead performanc­e for Femme, about a drag queen and his closeted attacker. At the craft awards, Femme took costume design and hair and makeup.

The winner of the debut screenwrit­er prize was Nida Manzoor for her tale of two sisters, Polite Society. Charlotte Regan’s Scrapper took breakthrou­gh producer and Vivian Oparah best breakthrou­gh performanc­e for her turn in romcom Rye Lane, which also took best original music.

Biker yarn If the Streets Were on Fire won best documentar­y, while The Taste of Mango’s Chloe Abrahams took best debut documentar­y director.

The Bifas were founded 25 years ago to celebrate British production­s not bankrolled by a major studio. Bifa patron Ray Winstone opened the proceeding­s on Sunday night, while Lolly Adefope and Kiell Smith-Bynoe hosted, and stars including Fiona Shaw, Zawe Ashton, Asa Butterfiel­d and Theo James presented awards.

Jodie Comer presented Stephen Graham with the Richard Harris award for outstandin­g contributi­on to British film. The special jury prize went to We Are Parable, a grassroots company that aims to promote and further audience interactio­n with Black cinema.

Awards campaignin­g has gone into overdrive over the past month since the end of the actors’ strike on 9 November. Stars are making up for lost time by energetica­lly promoting movies that they hope may be in line for key trophies in 2024.

Key contenders in a notably strong year include, as well as All of Us Strangers, another film by a British director: Jonathan Glazer’s The Zone of Interest, about the idyllic life Rudolf and Helga Hoss built for themselves and their children just outside the wall of Auschwitz, where he was camp commander.

Martin Scorsese’s indigenous epic Killers of the Flower Moon is also likely to fare well, as is The Holdovers, Alexander Payne’s 1970-set comedy/drama, which reunites him with Sideways star Paul Giamatti.

Celine Song’s Past Lives, billed as a Brief Encounter for the new century, dominated the Gothams and is tipped for considerab­le silverware; other hopefuls include Bradley Cooper’s Leonard Bernstein biopic, Maestro, Poor Things, Yorgos Lanthimos’s boisterous fantasy starring Emma Stone as a lustful reincarnat­ed woman, and Cord Jefferson’s publishing satire American Fiction.

Two films that premiered just before the strike began are also expected to figure: Barbie and Oppenheime­r. The nomination­s for the Golden Globe awards are announced on 11 December ahead of the ceremony on 7 January. Bafta nomination­s come on 18 January, and the ceremony follows a month later.

The Oscars shortlist follows on 23 February, and the ceremony – hosted once more by Jimmy Kimmel – will take place on 10 March.

 ?? ?? All of Us Strangers cast members Jamie Bell, Andrew Scott and Claire Foy. Photograph: Ash Knotek/Shuttersto­ck
All of Us Strangers cast members Jamie Bell, Andrew Scott and Claire Foy. Photograph: Ash Knotek/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? James Veysey/Shuttersto­ck ?? Andrew Haigh on stage. Photograph:
James Veysey/Shuttersto­ck Andrew Haigh on stage. Photograph:

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