The press release announcing the BAFTA nominations on January 9th has just been sent out. They give a time, 7:35, but I don’t know what time zone they mean by that.
The BAFTA noms will livestreamed at bafta.org and full nominations at 7:45. Again, I am not yet sure what time zone we’re talking about.
What to look for in the BAFTAs are potential trends up or down for certain films.
Expect to see: a big splash for Skyfall, a lot of nominations for Les Miserables (conversely, if those aren’t there, as expected), whether the Brits have gone for Lincoln or not; there’s this notion that the film might not play internationally. Where Zero Dark Thirty will sit — they gave Bigelow and Boal a big win for The Hurt Locker.
Last year, Their big winner was The Artist which received 12 BAFTA nominations. And the previous year, of course, The King’s Speech won big. Prior to that, The Hurt Locker and before that, Slumdog Millionaire. You have to then go back to 2007 to find Atonement beating No Country for Old Men to find a mismatch.
The BAFTA is not releasing a long list this year so we really have no clue as to how it will play out. Since the BAFTAS changed their date to happen BEFORE the Oscars only once has the Oscar Best Picture winner not been nominated for a BAFTA and that was Million Dollar Baby and I am fairly certain that it wasn’t eligible.
I have really no earthly idea how the BAFTA will go. But if either Lincoln, Argo, Zero Dark Thirty aren’t nominated, that makes them extreme long shots to win. For BAFTA, it’s more important what isn’t nominated than what is. Again, like most awards this year, Oscar ballots were turned in before BAFTA’s announcement.
They don’t generally match Oscar’s 100%, when there were five.
2002 5/5
2003 3/5
2004 2/5
2005 4/5
2006 4/5
2007 3/5
2008 5/5
2009 5/5 (out of 10 noms)
2010 5/5 (out of 10 noms)
2011 3/5 (out of 9 noms)
As far as the acting categories, it mostly applies that you need a nod there to win but of course, several Best Actress winners weren’t BAFTA nommed and went on to win. Best Director is mostly the same — their nominations don’t match but to win you are better off getting a nomination there.
I would guess, though, that their nominees might look something like:
Best Picture
Skyfall
Lincoln
Zero Dark Thirty
Argo
Silver Linings Playbook, Beasts of the Southern Wild or Les Miserables
I have absolutely no clue here, I must say, other than Skyfall for Best Picture. Then again, Skyfall could get bumped for Best Picture and end up in Best British Film. I expect Helen Mirren, Daniel Craig, Daniel Day-Lewis, Tom Wilkinson and Judi Dench will all make it in. Beyond that, it’s a mystery!
Follow BAFTA:
Twitter: @BAFTA / #EEBAFTAs
Facebook: /BAFTA
About 3.5hrs to go!
It’s perfectly conceivable that Smith and Dench each get two nods:
Dench – Best Actress (Best Exotic Marigold Hotel) and Best Supporting Actress (Skyfall)
Smith – Best Actress (Quartet) and Best Supporting Actress (Best Exotic Marigold Hotel)
I certainly hope so! Their performances are so seemless in these films.
The surprise of the baftas Juno temple scores best actress nom for little birds bank it!!!!!!!
On the West Coast of the USA it’s still going to be the 8th.
Says on the BAFTA website that nominations are to be annonced on the 9th (Wednesday)!!!! Another day – sigh!
Predictions
Best Film
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
Best British Film
Berberian Sound Studio
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
The Imposter
Les Miserables
Skyfall
Best Direction
Michael Haneke – Amour
Steven Spielberg – Lincoln
PT Anderson – The Master
Sam Mendes – Skyfall
Kathryn Bigelow – Zero Dark Thirty
Best Leading Actor
Daniel Craig – Skyfall
Daniel Day-Lewis – Lincoln
Hugh Jackman – Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix – The Master
Jean Louis Trintignant – Amour
Best Leading Actress
Jessica Chastain – Zero Dark Thirty
Marion Cotillard – Rust & Bone
Jennifer Lawrence – Silver Linings Playbook
Emmanuelle Riva – Amour
Quevezhane Wallis – Beasts of the Southern Wild
Best Supporting Actor
Javier Bardem – Skyfall
Philip Seymour Hoffman – The Master
Tommy Lee Jones – Lincoln
Eddie Redmayne – Les Miserables
Tom Wilkinson – The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Best Supporting Actress
Amy Adams – The Master
Samantha Barks – Les Miserables
Judi Dench – Skyfall
Anne Hathaway – Les Miserables
Maggie Smith – The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Best Original Screenplay
Amour
The Master
Moonrise Kingdom
Seven Psychopaths
Zero Dark Thirty
Best Adapted Screenplay
Beasts of the Southern Wild
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Skyfall
Best Foreign Language Film
Amour
Barbara
The Hunt
A Royal Affair
Rust & Bone
Best Cinematography
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
The Master
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
Best Editing
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Seven Psychopaths
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
Best Music
Argo
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Lincoln
Life of Pi
Zero Dark Thirty
Best Production Design
Anna Karenina
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Skyfall
Best Costume Design
Anna Karenina
The Hobbit
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Best Make-up & Hair
Anna Karenina
The Hobbit
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Best Sound
The Dark Knight Rises
Les Miserables
Life of Pi
Prometheus
Skyfall
Best Visual Effects
Cloud Atlas
The Dark Knight Rises
The Hobbit
Prometheus
Skyfall
I am hoping the livestreaming is worldwide.
And I guess since BAFTA is British, thus supposedly using the UK time schedule, it’s going to be a couple of hours or so before Tuesday midnight in my place somewhere in Asia Pacific. (It’s Tuesday late afternoon now.) Looking forward to it.
FILM:
1. Les Miserables
2. Lincoln
3. Skyfall
4. Silver Linings Playbook
5. The Master
DIRECTOR:
1. Tom Hooper
2. Steven Spielberg
3. Paul Thomas Anderson
4. Sam Mendes
5. Ang Lee
ACTOR:
1. Daniel Day Lewis
2. Hugh Jackman
3. Joaquin Phoenix
4. Anthony Hopkins
5. Jean Louis Trintigant
ACTRESS:
1. Jennifer Lawrence
2. Naomi Watts
3. Jessica Chastain
4. Emmanuelle Riva
5. Helen Mirren
SUPPORTING ACTOR:
1. Philip Seymour Hoffman
2. Tommy Lee Jones
3. Javier Bardem
4. Eddie Redmayne
5. Christoph Waltz
SUPPORTING ACTRESS:
1. Anne Hathaway
2. Sally Field
3. Judi Dench- Skyfall
4. Maggie Smith- Hotel
5. Emily Blunt- Looper
ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY:
1. The Master
2. Amour
3. Django Unchained
4. Looper
5. Moonrise Kingdom
ADAPTED SCREENPLAY:
1. Lincoln
2. Silver Linings Playbook
3. Skyfall
4. Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
5. The Dark Knight Rises
CINEMATOGRAPHY:
1. Skyfall
2. The Master
3. Zero Dark Thirty
4. Django Unchained
5. Life of Pi
SCORE:
1. The Master
2. Lincoln
3. Life of Pi
4. Anna Karenina
5. Skyfall
PRODUCTION:
1. Les Miserables
2. Skyfall
3. Lincoln
4. Life of Pi
5. The Master
VISUAL EFFECTS:
1. Skyfall
2. Life of Pi
3. The Impossible
4. The Dark Knight Rises
5. The Hobbit
COSTUME:
1. Les Miserables
2. Skyfall
3. Lincoln
4. The Master
5. Anna Karenina
MAKE-UP:
1. Les Miserables
2. Lincoln
3. Skyfall
4. Anna Karenina
5. The Hobbit
EDITING:
1. Skyfall
2. Les Miserables
3. Lincoln
4. Zero Dark Thirty
5. The Impossible
FILM NOT IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE:
1. Amour
2. Rust and Bone
No way I can make it till 2:35am, will just have to wait till 7, hopefully we can replay the nomination announcement!
Bryce Forestieri
No buzz whatsoever, however if he made the Bafta-cut, it would be a whole different ball game. Emmanuelle Riva has considerably better buzz and even she is struggling at the moment as far as traction goes. Both could make a glorious last minute comeback, though, we’ll see. Problem with Trintignant is, that his category has 6 damn strong contenders (Day-Lewis, Jackman, Cooper, Hawkes, Washington, Phoenix), then 3 viable surprises with not completely hopeless perception (Golden Globe nominees Gere, Black, Murray) and then 3 more lacking precursor-love but potentially benefitting from being leads in VERY strong BP-contenders (Foxx, Sharma, Affleck). That’s 12 already for 5 slots. In a weaker year, Trintignant could have been one of those 12, but 2012 was simply too strong and competitive for lead actor performances.
I hope a lot of nominations for The Impossible,this year most strong and moving picture also for the direction of Bayona,the special effets and the great performaces of the cast,especially the wonderful Naomi Watts for her tour de force hauting performace.
@phanton
Jean-Louis Trintignant?!
Christophe
Good call, I really loved his performance, I don’t consider him THAT seriously because he is in the lead race and damn, that category is massive this year. Of course a Bafta nomination could convince me to move him higher on my list, he is 14th at the moment :
FRONTRUNNER
1. Daniel Day-Lewis (Lincoln)
ON-PAPER LOCKS
2. Hugh Jackman (Les Misérables)
3. Bradley Cooper (Silver Linings Playbook)
4. John Hawkes (The Sessions)
5. Denzel Washington (Flight)
MAJOR THREAT
6. Joaquin Phoenix (The Master)
POTENTIAL SURPRISE
7. Richard Gere (Arbitrage)
8. Jack Black (Bernie)
9. Bill Murray (Hyde Park on Hudson)
POTENTIAL SHOCKER
10. Jamie Foxx (Django Unchained)
11. Suraj Sharma (Life of Pi)
12. Ben Affleck (Argo)
ONLY WITH BAFTA LOVE (=British-vote)
13. Anthony Hopkins (Hitchcock)
14. Tom Holland (The Impossible)
15. Denis Lavant (Holy Motors)
I predict it will be very fucking British.
@phantom
my money is on Tom holland from the impossible
http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/01/07/16302383-impossible-actor-tom-holland-movie-completely-changed-my-life?lite
Mark Ruffalo calls him ” fantastic” in his endorsement piece of Naomi Watts and most critics, even those who didn’t like the movie, agree that they both deliver very strong performances.
Well, taking into consideration that BAFTA is rather good at predicting the Oscar-surprise (Oldman in 2011, Bardem in 2010) if someone so-far-overlooked turns up in an acting category, I think it will be safe to assume that contender is also closer to that Oscar top5 than we think. My money is on Knightley or McGregor, maybe someone from LesMis OR a British veteran (Maggie Smith for Quartet, Judi Dench for Skyfall, Michael Caine for The Dark Knight Rises, Anthony Hopkins for Hitchcock, Ian McKellen for The Hobbit) and frankly, Suraj Sharma wouldn’t shock me that much, either.
Wuthering Heights is such a great film. The BAFTAs missed a good ‘un last year in not nominating it.
Best British film I saw in 2012 is Andrea Arnold’s WUTHERING HEIGHTS!! It’s also one of the better cinematographies of the year; leagues better than SKYFALL’s which has been overpraised in my opinion.
Could both Dench and Smith receive Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress nods?
Expect Les Mis in spades, everywhere.
Has the DGA contest closed btw?
I think the Bafta’s nominations will be…
BEST FILM
Argo
Django Unchained
Les Miserables
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
BEST BRITISH FILM
Anna Karenina
Berberian Sound Studio
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Broken
Skyfall
BEST DIRECTOR
Ben Affleck- Argo
Kathryn Bigelow- Zero Dark Thirty
Tom Hooper- Les Miserables
Ang Lee- Life of Pi
Sam Mendes- Skyfall
BEST LEADING ACTOR
Daniel Day-Lewis- Lincoln
John Hawkes- The Sessions
Hugh Jackman- Les Miserables
Mads Mikkelsen- The Hunt
Joaquin Phoenix- The Master
BEST LEADING ACTRESS
Jessica Chastain- Zero Dark Thirty
Marion Cotillard- Rust and Bone
Helen Hunt- The Sessions
Keira Knightley- Anna Karenina
Naomi Watts- The Impossible
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Javier Bardem- Skyfall
Philip Seymour Hoffman- The Master
Jude Law- Anna Karenina
Ewan McGregor- The Impossible
Christoph Waltz- Django Unchained
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Emily Blunt- Looper
Judi Dench- Skyfall
Anne Hathaway- Les Miserables
Nicole Kidman- The Paperboy
Maggie Smith- The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Anna Karenina
Argo
Life of Pi
Rust and Bone
Skyfall
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Broken
Django Unchained
The Hunt
The Master
Zero Dark Thirty
BEST FILM NOT IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
Amour
Barbara
The Hunt
No
Rust and Bone
BEST MUSIC
Anna Karenina
Argo
Life of Pi
Rust and Bone
Skyfall
BEST EDITION
Argo
Django Unchained
Les Miserables
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Anna Karenina
Life of Pi
Rust and Bone
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN
Anna Karenina
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Miserables
Prometheus
Skyfall
BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Anna Karenina
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Miserables
Lincoln
A Royal Affair
BEST MAKE-UP AND HAIR
Anna Karenina
Cloud Atlas
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Les Miserables
Lincoln
BEST SOUND
The Dark Knight Rises
Les Miserables
Prometheus
Skyfall
Zero Dark Thirty
BEST SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS
Cloud Atlas
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Life of Pi
Prometheus
Skyfall
Ryan, what do you think of my Bafta’s predictions? Am I wrong?
@Bjork’s Swan Dress
Frankenweenie would totally deserve to be a BP nominee… It’s as good if not better than Up and Toy Story 3.
I happen to fly by the BAFTA headquarters every morning for my daily wing flex, and luckily got the chance to see into the secret room, many stories high, that houses the nominee list until its unveiling tomorrow. They left a window open, can you believe it? I flew right in and take a quick glance.
I must say I’m surprised by many of the choices. I liked “Frankenweenie” but I wouldn’t have pegged it for a Best Film nomination. Pleased for all the love for “The Deep Blue Sea”, a truly extraordinary film. I cried so much my feathers started wilting. And I, for one, don’t think “Zero Dark Thirty” suggests that torture led to the intel that helped us find UBL. So I was pleased to see the voters turn out so big for that film.
I’ve unfortunately never been on the BAFTA Red Carpet, though I doubt anything will ever top my time on the Oscar carpet. I have seen it all, as they said.
Are you serious Yvette? What’s it to you who and what the Brits want to award? And what does it say about them? Well, maybe that’s the kind of movies they like. Maybe they are fond of movies that resonate with their culture, just like everyone else. People are different, and just because someone has a different sensibility than you, and won’t like or feel at all emotional about the movies you like, doesn’t mean you can call them names. Believe me, “Lincoln” won’t get any Polish movie awards. Now call me a nationalist, please.
They love DDL, but all this talk about whether they Lincoln will play internationally is confusing to me. I mean, the Brits do well internationally with historical films like The King’s Speech, The Queen, Iron Lady etc….
we eat that stuff up. If they ignore Lincoln or Argo but salivate over a Bond film – what does that say about their own nationalistic, anglo-phile selves?
Anybody think Bill Murray will get a bafta nom for best actor? He deserves a bafta nom and Oscar nom
There is a special committee that selects the Best British Film nominees.
“They give a time, 7:35, but I don’t know what time zone they mean by that.”
You’re not serious, are you? 😀 Maybe it’s a bit weird for Americans to grasp, but when there’s only one time zone in a country, that’s the one times are given in, and not American time tones.
Not really feeling Les Miz here. Sure it is a lazy default pick but HFPA didn’t go gaga over it. Actors may be mentioned but not much more.
Skyfall, Bardem, Dench and Tom Holland might all show up somewhere (Holland in British). Watts probably, too. Apart from these, your usual suspects.
@Christophe
You’re so full of s***! It happened several times that a rising star nominee also snagged a nom in the main acting categories (Michelle Williams, Ellen Page, Carey Mulligan, Jesse Eisenberg, Andrew Garfield), but I do believe they shouldn’t allow such things and leave spots for other actors, especially in a year like this one when there are so many great performances.
Yes, deep blue sea was only eligible last year
@davidleary
juno temple is already listed for The rising star award. You can vote for her here:
http://www.ee.co.uk/bafta
nonetheless, I belizve the rising star award only includes performers who were not selected for the main acting categories.
I think juno temple could score a bafta nom for best actress for little birds or a supporting nom for killer Joe the baftas usually take care of their own
Million Dollar Baby was eligible. It didn’t receive a nod.
By the way, why do you people list The Deep Blue Sea? Wasn’t it eligible last year and snubbed?
My picks:
Best Film
Les Misérables
Lincoln
Skyfall
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Zero Dark Thirty
Director
Kathryn Bigelow, Zero Dark Thirty
Michael Haneke, Amour
Tom Hooper, Les Miserables
Ang Lee, Life of Pi
Steven Spielberg, Lincoln
Best Actor
Daniel Craig, Skyfall
Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln
Hugh Jackman, Les Miserables
Joaquin Phoenix, The Master
Jean-Louis Trintignant, Amour
Best Actress
Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty
Marion Cotillard, Rust & Bone
Emannuelle Riva, Amour
Naomi Watts, The Impossible
Rachel Weisz, The Deep Blue Sea
Supporting Actor
Javier Bardem, Skyfall
Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln
Phillip Seymour Hoffman, The Master
Bill Nighy, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Eddie Redmayne, Les Miserables
Supporting Actress
Amy Adams, The Master
Judi Dench, Skyfall
Sally Field, Lincoln
Anne Hathaway, Les Misérables
Maggie Smith, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
British Film
Anna Karenina
Berberian Sound Studio
The Deep Blue Sea
Ginger & Rosa
Sightseers
I preferred Casino Royale, but Skyfall is really well done from a technical standpoint. Given how well it’s done with the BFCA and SAG, I’d be surprised if they don’t include it in Best Picture.
Skyfall will be big of course but I think it will go under Best British Film, then BD (Mendes), BA (Dench), supp actor (Bardem) maybe supp actress if they go all out for the 50th anniversary (Harris), Cinematography (Deakins), Song (Adele), score, editing, etc.
>>€ Films to get BP noms will be Best Exotic Marigold (Smith, Wilkinson), Anna Karenina (better rated by Brit critics), Les Miz, Zero Dark Thirty and maybe Lincoln.
>>>DDL is in for BA and Spielberg for BD but not sure who else from Lincoln will make it, Lawrence for SLP but that will be it for that film, Lee for Life of Pi.
Did the BAFTAs ever release their Long List? Did they do away with that this year in the rush to get their nominees announced before the Oscars?
No longlist from BAFTA this year, Shane.
The BAFTAs will be so tricky this year if they heavily nominate Skyfall and Marigold. People are already predicting Bardem and Smith for the Oscars, and after this, Bardem will have BFCA-SAG-BAFTA and Smith SAG-BAFTA (and GG recognition for her other film and Downton Abbey). I’m not feeling either of them for an Oscar nod, but you never know. It’s not like BAFTA will recognize people on the fringe like Ann Dowd and Kidman (ineligible).
Anyone have a list of which films are ineligible this year?
I mean instead of voting separately in both categories?
@Ryan
Does it work like the London Film Critics Circle where they only vote for Best Film and then pick up the 5 highest-ranked British Films out of that list for the Best British Film category?
Christophe
Very good question. The answer is one of the millions of things I don’t know.
While we’re using Casino Royale as basis to predict what might happen to Skyfll, are there really a lot of people who think Skyfall is a better movie than Casino Royale? I don’t.
I can see them singling out “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” since the film was popular and had so many good British performances: Bill Nighy, Tom Wilkinson, Penelope Wilton, Maggie Smith and Judi Dench.
I also think Maggie Smith has a chance as Best Actress in Quartet (but not sure it has opened in the UK yet).
Skyfall will definitely be the big winner for nominations. I predict 12.
@paddy
I was actually making fun of Lyon’s remark and backing up yours… but I do like Life of Pi so I sure hope it gets in.
I’m not using Life of Pi’s box office success to argue that it should be nominated. I’m using it to argue that it is popular in the UK. It’s better-reviewed than Ted, and also more recent, and more akin to the British Academy’s usual tastes.
@Paddy
lol! Ted topped the UK box office too! Yet should it be nominated for best picture at the Baftas? Well I personally think it should, but I might be the only one…
Yeah, I think Life of Pi topped the box office in the UK, didn’t it? Still, with only five Best Picture nominees, and with the BAFTAs being a little tricky to call, it may not make it. Ang Lee will probably be in for Best Director, even if Pi’s not in Picture.
It’s possible for a movie to be nominated by BAFTA in both categories, Best British Film and Best Film. Happens all the time. But they have been fairly realistic about making sure any British films that cross over to the broader pond-crossing category can really stand up to scrutiny. Has to be something like The Queen or Atonement to play with the heavy Hollywood hitters.
And we should probably expect Les Mis to be claimed as a British Film, right? BAFTA says United 93 was a British film.
7.35am UK time
CASINO ROYALE nabbed 9 BAFTA noms back in 2006/07 so I fully expect SKYFALL to do as well, if not better. Judi Dench is a long-time BAFTA favourite and she’s a shoo-in for a Best Supporting Actress nomination for SKYFALL. Likewise Roger Deakins (a three-times winner, mostly recently for TRUE GRIT). I suspect SKYFALL will be like TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY last year – pick up the most BAFTA noms (or joint most) but not do so well at the Oscars.
LES MISERABLES have been getting raves from the British critics and I can see that winning the Best Picture.
Daniel Day Lewis is assured of a Best Actor nomination and will win for LINCOLN. He’s a three time BAFTA winner (MY LEFT FOOT, GANGS OF NEW YORK and THERE WILL BE BLOOD). I guess 4 Best Actor wins will be a record.
Local time of London,UK, or GMT. Lincoln, Argo, and Life of pi are locks for Best Picture. So I would add Life of Pi to your list to BP nominations. Life of Pi is both well received by critics and audience alike. It is respectable in the box office in the US, in line with other feature films made from previous Booker prize winners such as the Schindler’s list and the English patient, but it is considered a hit in the UK and elsewhere. During the first week of January 2013, Life of pi ranks #1 at the worldwide box office.
I hope Marion Cotillard be nominated for Rust and Bone in Academy Awards and Bafta’s
*it
Probably 7:35a.m. GMT.
I’m not so sure on Skyfall for Best Film. They do like to try to match Oscar; when there’s a British film in contention, they often include it. But it may not have enough prestige. I suspect it could do similarly to Casino Royale – be rewarded with a Best British Film nomination among many others, but fail to make it in to Best Film.
Lincoln didn’t go down very well with the London Critics’ Circle, whereas Zero Dark Thirty did. It’s right up BAFTA’s street.
Will there be an official predictions contest, btw, Sasha?
Also, Million Dollar Baby was the victim of screener FAIL from the studio. It was eligible for the BAFTA, but not released in the UK until after voting, and there was a problem with screeners. I think either none were sent out, or too few. It didn’t get a single BAFTA nomination. Sideways suffered a similar problem that same year – it did get a nomination, for Adapted Screenplay, which is went on to win.
For those who want to have a say in the BAFTAS, you can vote for the rising star award:
http://explore.ee.co.uk/bafta?WT.mc_id=OFF_EE_V_bafta&WT.tsrc=Vanity
I’m still hesitating between Suraj Sharma and Alicia Vikander… what do you think?
“I don’t know what time zone they mean by that.”
For real? 🙂
7:35 GMT = 2:35A.M E.T/11:35PM P.T.
7:45 GMT (that’s around the time they announced last year) would be 23:45 on Tuesday PST
I’m guessing that’s on either side of midnight for us.