‘Nomadland,’ ‘Rocks’ lead notably more diverse BAFTA noms
Following an outcry over the lack of diversity in last year’s nominees and an overhaul of its rules and regulations, the EE British Film Academy Awards on Tuesday unveiled a far more inclusive field of nominees, including record nods for female directors and a leading seven nominations for Chloe Zhao’s “Nomadland” and Sarah Gavron’s “Rocks.”
Much like previous Academy Awards controversies, last year’s nominations by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts spawned a #BaftasSoWhite hashtag and were denounced for their all-male directing nominees and all-white acting nominees. Director Steve McQueen said the BAFTAs — Britain’s equivalent of the Oscars — risked irrelevancy. After winning for his performance in “Joker,” Joaquin Phoenix said he felt “conflicted” even accepting the award.
The British academy responded with a seven-month review. It expanded membership, mandated unconscious bias training for its 6,700 voting members, grew the number of nominees in numerous categories and changed the nomination process to include a longlist phase. Acting categories were selected in part through juries. Watching all longlisted films were compulsory viewing. And the longlisted directing field was divided equally between women and men.
The results on Tuesday made for a radically different BAFTAs. The leading vote-getters were Zhao’s drama about a middle-aged woman (Frances McDormand) who travels the American West while living out of her van, and Gavron’s coming-of-age tale about a Black British teenage girl (Bukky Bakray) in London.