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    ‘Conclave’ celebrates BAFTA win

    LONDON (AP) – Papal thriller Conclave won four prizes including best picture on Sunday at the 78th British Academy Film Awards, where genre-bending musical Emilia Pérez proved that it’s still an awards contender despite a multipronged backlash that looked to have dented its chances.

    At a ceremony where no film dominated, The Brutalist equalled the awards tally of Conclave, scooping four trophies, including best director for Brady Corbet and best actor for Adrien Brody. Mikey Madison won the best actress prize for Brooklyn tragicomedy Anora.

    Conclave, which stars Ralph Fiennes as a cardinal corralling conniving clergy as they elect a new pope, beat Anora, The Brutalist, Emilia Pérez and Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown to the top prize. Conclave was also named outstanding British film and took trophies for editing and adapted screenplay.

    Supporting performer prizes went to Kieran Culkin for A Real Pain and Zoe Saldaña for Emilia Pérez, which also won the award for best film not in the English language.

    Karla Sofía Gascón, who stars as the titular ex-cartel boss in Emilia Pérez, was a best-actress nominee but did not attend the ceremony. Gascón has withdrawn from promoting the film, which has 13 Oscar nominations, amid controversy over her social media posts.

    ABOVE & BELOW: Adrien Brody poses with the leading actor award for ‘The Brutalist’; and (right) Edward Berger poses with the outstanding British film award for ‘Conclave’ at the 78th British Academy Film Awards, BAFTA’s in London. PHOTO: AP
    PHOTO: AP
    Zoe Saldana, winner of the supporting actress award for ‘Emilia Perez’. PHOTO: AP
    Mikey Madison poses with the leading actress award for ‘Anora. PHOTO: AP
    Jesse Eisenberg poses with the best supporting actor award he received on behalf of Kieran Culkin for ‘A Real Pain’. PHOTO: AP

    The film’s director, Jacques Audiard, has condemned those comments, but in an acceptance speech thanked Gascón along with her co-stars Saldaña and Selena Gomez.

    “I am deeply proud of what we have all achieved together,” he said.

    FROM THE BAFTAS TO THE OSCARS

    Stars including Cynthia Erivo, Hugh Grant, Ariana Grande, Lupita Nyong’o, Timothée Chalamet and Saoirse Ronan walked the red carpet at London’s Royal Festival Hall for the awards, known as BAFTAs. The British prizes often provide clues about who will triumph at Hollywood’s Academy Awards on March 2, in an unusually hard-to-call awards season.

    They also have a distinctly British accent. The ceremony kicked off with its kilt-wearing host, Scottish actor David Tennant, leading the audience in a rousing singalong of The Proclaimers’ anthem I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles).

    Madison won the female acting trophy for her powerhouse performance as an exotic dancer entangled with a Russian oligarch’s son in Anora. She beat Gascón, Demi Moore for body-horror film The Substance, Ronan for The Outrun, Erivo for Wicked and Marianne Jean-Baptiste for Hard Truths.

    Brody beat competition from Fiennes, Chalamet, who plays the young Dylan in A Complete Unknown, Grant for the horror film Heretic, Colman Domingo for prison drama Sing Sing and Sebastian Stan for his portrayal of a young Donald Trump in The Apprentice.

    Brody, who plays a Hungarian-Jewish architect in the post-war United States, said The Brutalist carried a powerful message for our divided times.

    “It speaks to the need for all of us to share in the responsibility of how we want others to be treated and how we want to be treated by others,” he said. “There’s no place any more for antisemitism. There’s no place for racism.”

    The Brutalist also won prizes for its cinematography and musical score.

    Saldaña won for her role as a lawyer who helps the title character in Emilia Pérez transition to a woman and out of a life of crime. She called the film “the creative challenge of a lifetime.” – Jill Lawless

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