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Human Ingenuity and Creativity. Our Cultural Heritage.
Favourite things. Music and Movies. Nature. Items that interest me on any topic.
IT is pop music’s most polarising dilemma
— Lennon or McCartney?
Canadian television personality Matt Schichter
posed the question to 550 actors and musicians over a decade and has compiled
the results in a 34 minute documentary. He told them to answer the Beatles binary
curveball in one word only. Most of his interview subjects complied but some
couldn’t help offering lengthy validations for their choice.Here it is:
Those on Team Lennon usually didn’t hesitate.
Many
on Team McCartney felt compelled to explain themselves.
Counting Crows frontman Adam Duritz opined for
more than a minute as to why he rates McCartney over Lennon.
He gave the bespectacled Beatle props for his
lyrics but cited McCartney’s enduring melodies as the key to his
greatness.
“I don’t know how one guy wrote so many pieces of
music that I can hum 50 years later,” Duritz said.
“I don’t know how that’s possible. And that to me
is such a rare thing.”
Several musicians said they preferred McCartney
because of his voice or pointed at Helter Skelter as evidence of his
songwriting genius. It was written by McCartney but credited to
Lennon/McCartney.
Jakob Dylan was among the 9 per cent of
entertainers polled who had no answer or offered McLennon.
“I'm not answering that one. And I never engage in
The Beatles versus The Stones. There’s room for all of them,” Dylan
said.
Australian filmmaker Baz Luhrmann also sat on the
fence.
“As individuals they are absolutely brilliant,
together they are something else,” he said.
Rock’n’roll pioneer Bo Diddley didn’t rate either
Beatle.
“Neither. I don’t understand what they’re doing.
Never have,” he said.
Schichter didn’t intend to make a doco out of the
poll responses he had gathered over a decade of interviews.
“Honestly, there was no rhyme or reason. Just
thought it was an interesting/telling question and the acts might enjoy the
compilation,” he said.
A sample of Team Lennon includes Aaron Paul,
Arctic Monkeys, David Byrne, Florence Welch, Gary Oldman, Justin Bieber, Kevin
Spacey, Lady Gaga, LL Cool J, Morgan Freeman. Robert DeNiro, Sylvester Stallone,
Sam Smith, Daniel Johns and Slash.
Those who answered McCartney included Dwayne
Johnson, Ellie Goulding, Fall Out Boy, Franz Ferdinand, fun, Hanson, Selena
Gomez, JJ Abrams, Katy Perry, Miss Piggy, Pete Townshend and Psy.
Personally, I am with Justin Long and pick George
Harrison.
THE FINAL TALLY
Here were the most popular responses to
Schichter’s decade-long poll: John Lennon: 282 Paul McCartney: 196 No Answer: 50 George Harrison: 15 Ringo Starr: 4 Jimi Hendrix: 1 Lou Reed: 1 Oasis: 1 (That was from Metallica’s Lars Ulrich.
We think he was joking)
The Recording Academy has
released it’s list of special award winners for this year’s ceremonies in
February.
Receiving the Lifetime Achievement
Award are the Bee Gees, below, Pierre Boulez, Buddy Guy, George Harrison, Flaco
Jimenez, The Louvin Brothers and Wayne Shorter. The Lifetime Achievement Award
honors performers who have made contributions of outstanding artistic
significance to the field of recording.
Above: Flaco Jiménez & Ry Cooder perform "La Bamba". The Trustees Award goes to
Richard Perry, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil and George Wein. The Trustees Award
is the equivalent of the Lifetime Achievement except it recognizes such
contributions in areas other than performance.
The Technical Grammy will go to
Ray Kurzweil, the man who developed the first electronic instrument to
realistically create the musical response of real instruments.
Each honoree will be recognized
at a special ceremony on Saturday, February 7 and acknowledged at the Grammy
ceremony the next night.
“This year we pay tribute to
exceptional creators who have made prolific contributions to our culture and
history,” said Recording Academy President/CEO Neil Portnow. “It is an honor and
a privilege to recognize such a diverse group of talented trailblazers, whose
incomparable bodies of work and timeless legacies will continue to be celebrated
for generations to come.”
About the Lifetime
Achievement Award Honorees: The Bee Gees, comprising of
brothers Barry, Maurice* and Robin Gibb*, were one of the most successful groups
in pop history with hits such as “Stayin’ Alive,” “How Can You Heal A Broken
Heart” and “How Deep Is Your Love.” The trio’s contributions to the Saturday
Night Fever soundtrack made it one of the best-selling soundtracks of all time,
selling more than 15 million copies in the United States and garnering the group
four GRAMMYs, including Album Of The Year and Producer Of The Year.
French composer Pierre Boulez is
internationally renowned having conducted the SĂĽdwestfunk Orchestra, Cleveland
Orchestra and BBC Symphony Orchestra. He served as musical director of the New
York Philharmonic from 1971-1977. The 26-time GRAMMY winner continues to be one
of the most influential music creators within the classical genre.
Six-time GRAMMY winner Buddy Guy
is one of the most celebrated blues guitarists of all time. Throughout his more
than 50-year career, Guy has influenced generations of guitar players with his
unique sound and style. Guy released his most recent album, Rhythm & Blues
in 2013, and continues to tour.
Multi-instrumentalist and
singer/songwriter George Harrison* achieved international fame as a member of
the Beatles, one of the most influential groups of all time. The 12-time GRAMMY
winner’s embrace of Indian music is often credited with helping introduce world
music to the West. As a solo artist, Harrison achieved success with projects
such as his GRAMMY Hall Of Fame® inducted album All Things Must Pass and The
Concert For Bangladesh, the latter of which garnered an Album Of The Year
GRAMMY.
Ira and Charlie Loudermilk,
better known as the Louvin Brothers*, rank among the top duos in country music
history. Originally beginning their careers in gospel music, and eventually
incorporating secular pop songs, they landed a record deal with Capitol Records
and quickly became household names in the 1950’s. Eventually the brothers
launched solo careers, continuing to set a blueprint for future generations of
country and rock musicians.
Saxophonist and composer Wayne
Shorter began his jazz career at the tender age of 16. With a successful solo
career, his tenure with Weather Report and his milestone collaborations with
Miles Davis and John Coltrane, Shorter has distinguished himself as a leading
figure in jazz. As a composer, the 10-time GRAMMY winner is best known for jazz
standards such as “Footprints” and “JuJu,” among others.
About the Trustees Award
Honorees: Richard Perry is one of the most
successful producers in pop music history with a career spanning more than four
decades. He has produced classic recordings for such legendary artists as Ray
Charles, Neil Diamond, Carly Simon, Ringo Starr, and Barbra Streisand among
others. In 1978 Perry launched Planet Records, an independent label that
produced many successful hits for artists including the multi-GRAMMY-winning
group the Pointer Sisters. Perry continues to work as an independent
producer.
The two-time GRAMMY-winning
songwriting duo of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil has created such an impressive
body of work within the past four decades that their compositions have been
described as “a soundtrack of our lives.” This husband-and-wife team has written
hit songs such as “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin'” (with Phil Spector), “On
Broadway” (with Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller), “Here You Come Again,” “Never
Gonna Let You Go,” “Just Once,” and “We Gotta Get Out Of This Place” among
others. Mann and Weil have also composed scores for several film and theatre
projects and they continue to explore new creative avenues.
American jazz promoter and
producer George Wein is recognized as the founder of the Newport Jazz Festival,
which celebrated its 60th anniversary in August 2014. Wein’s pioneering spirit
includes incorporating sponsor association along with partnering the original
concept of an outdoor music event that would later serve as the impetus for
festivals: Monterey Jazz Festival, Woodstock, Lollapalooza, Coachella, and
Bonnaroo. Through his production company Festival Productions, he would go on to
produce the Newport Folk Festival, which he created with folk icon Pete Seeger
in 1959, and the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, which he founded in
1970. Wein celebrated his 90th birthday in October 2014 and continues to
creatively influence and advance the concept of live music.
About the Technical
GRAMMY Award Recipients: Ray Kurzweil is an American
author, computer scientist, inventor, and is the current director of engineering
at Google. He is credited as the principal innovator of omni-front optical
character recognition, text-to-speech synthesis, and speech recognition
technology.
Kurzweil founded Kurzweil Music
Systems and in 1984 introduced the Kurzweil K250, the first computer-based
instrument that could realistically recreate the musical response of a grand
piano and other orchestra instruments. PBS selected Kurzweil as one of its “They
Made America” series.
“This
year, we pay tribute to exceptional creators who have made prolific
contributions to our culture and history,” the Academy's President-CEO
Neil Portnow said in a press statement.
Describing the Beatles'
composer, singer and guitarist, George Harrison, as a
'multi-instrumentalist', the Recording Academy said in its statement
that his embracing of Indian music had often been credited with helping
to introduce world music to the West.
In Aug 1971, Harrison, a
12-time Grammy winner, and his friend sitar maestro Ravi Shankar
organised a benefit concert at the Madison Square Garden in New York.
The
show was meant to raise international awareness of the 1971 Liberation
War and fund relief efforts for the refugees, who had fled Bangladesh
and taken shelter in the neighbouring Indian states of West Bengal,
Tripura and Assam.
The historic 'Concert for Bangladesh' was
followed by a bestselling live album, which went on to be the Album of
the Year in the 15th Grammy Awards in 1972.
In an interview with the U.K.'s biggest music
magazine Jimmy Page said this week that he's not just about remastering old Led
Zeppelin material, as he did in a project just completed. He is also, he said,
still moving forward musically.
Page, set to turn 71 in
January, said he's written new material and is nearly ready to present it. Or
ready to get ready to be ready. "I'm playing guitar at the moment,” Page told
the Classic Rock mag.
“Because I'm getting ready. Starting to get ready."
The guitar wizard appears to
have given up ideas for a Led Zeppelin reunion, as much thanks to Robert Plant's
absolute refusal to do so as his own need to move on. Perhaps more than any rock
musician now so old, Page gets requests and plenty of attention and he's active
always, but much of it seems to be connected to Led Zeppelin and the past.
He just published an autobiography stuffed with 600 photographs,
each one chosen by himself. Jimmy Page by Jimmy Page comes after a
similar book he released in 2010, over 700 photos, most of Led Zeppelin. The
2010 book was published by Genesis Books, the same publisher for his latest, but
it was a pricey, well-bound, limited edition that cost at the time about £450, a
hefty $700 American. It sold out to collectors quickly.
In August of 2011 Page
put up a Jimmy Page website, a memory-inducing and varied site that features photos
and interviews. It also features "on this day" recaps, telling us where Led
Zeppelin was, and sometimes where rock n' roll and the world was, on the same
date back in, primarily, the 60s and 70s.
In the interview Page, awarded an Order of the British Empire
(OBE) in 2005 for all the charity work he's done, didn't sound prepared to
simply turf the past and replace it with a new venture. But he's not completely
got a hold of it and more than once in the talk he said that often he does not
know what he's doing until he's doing it. "Whatever I do, I don't want people to have made up their minds
before I've done it," Page said. "They already have. On the internet, people are
telling me, 'you're doing this, and you're doing that'. Am I? You just wait and
see what I do. I've got new material that I’ve written, and it will be
surprising."
Despite those surprises the
past won't entirely be abandoned, not at all. It just won't be the only focus.
“I don’t want to go out there and bore people,” he said. “If I was doing a show
or something, I’d like to show what I’ve done along the way but definitely have
musical surprises for people so they wouldn’t start yawning.”
This isn't the first time in 2014 that he's spoken about getting
back to it. During a trip to the U.S. in the Spring, Page told the Boston Globe
it was time. "It's definitely time," he said. "I won't say to start dusting down
the guitar, it doesn't need dusting down, but time to get together with some
musicians and be seen to be playing.
That's the important thing." Around the same time he told Rolling Stone: "I've got lots of
material I've written on acoustic guitar. Lots and lots. Right now I need to get
myself up to speed, and that won't take too long. "I don't know what musicians I'd play with. I do have material and
a passion for it; I need to work towards it, and now I can without all the other
side issues going on. I play guitar at least once a week.
Now the Zeppelin
project is finished, I'll be playing daily for the foreseeable future." In the end though, nothing is set or much closer than in the
Spring. Which is perhaps the reason we can't resist this: It's been a long time
since he rock and rolled, been a long time, been a long time, been a long
lonely, lonely....time.
Picture credit and lots more information with many thanks to John Reiber
This post is for Mario!
Jimmy Page To Release Sound Tracks
Album
Led Zeppelin guitar legend Jimmy Page will release a box set of
his two film soundtracks expanded with never before released
music.
‘Sound Tracks’ will feature music composed by Page for the two
movies he worked on ‘Death Wish II’ (1982) and ‘Lucifer Rising’
(2012). According to Page “The archive material and work included here
serve as an illustration of the ongoing process at the time of these two
projects.” The
collection will be available as a 4CD, 4 vinyl or signed deluxe
edition. ‘Sound Tracks’ will be available in March.
This list is compiled by Leigh Paatsch so it is a personal version, and very likely to fit with many others' opinions. I have seen quite a few of them, and tend to agree with many movies listed here. Note the number of biographies. If you visit the source there is also a list of the 10 Worst Movies.
1.12 Years A Slave The best film released this year tackled a type of subject matter that
Hollywood has conspicuously avoided exploring in too much detail for far
too long. A film as complex, compelling and confronting as 12 Years a Slave
not only reignites a familiar sense of outrage about a shameful past.
It also promotes a fresh understanding of a terrible era in US history. 2. The Grand Budapest Hotel A sprawling, lavish and highly enjoyable escape from reality, a
fictional five-star crash-pad in an equally fictional corner of eastern
Europe. The famously micro-managed visuals of director Wes Anderson are
further enhanced by the surprising comic smarts of Ralph Fiennes. (I loved this movie! See this post.)
3.Gone Girl Gillian Flynn's sensational 2012 best-seller copped a malevolently
mischievous adaptation from one of the best directors around, David
Fincher (The Social Network). An entertainingly provocative film, it set tongues wagging and minds racing in the trashy tradition of Basic Instinct and Fatal Attraction. 4. The Lego Movie The anything-goes creative ethos that is the very spirit of Lego was
applied to all levels of this stunning animated production. The movie's
conceptual agility never ceased to dazzle, the all-Lego visuals both
innovated and resonated at heights only previously scaled by Pixar. 5.Whiplash Never the typical underdog-triumphs-against-all-odds anyone expects it
to be. This gripping double character study of an aspiring student
drummer and his oppressive instructor follows its own powerful beat to a
frenzied conclusion. Young lead Miles Teller is a dead-set star of the
future. 6.Ida The best foreign-language film of 2014 by a clear space. A minimal plot
concerning a young Polish woman visiting her only known relative is
magnified by mesmerising direction and astonishing B&W
cinematography. Not a single frame, line or gesture is out of place.
Find and cherish this film.
7.The Wolf Of Wall Street Just as Leonardo DiCaprio was unforgettable as the infamous Jordan
Belfort - the man who put the "broke" in stockbroker - so too was the
scorched-earth direction of veteran Martin Scorsese. He attacked this
immorality tale with energy and menace. 8.Dallas Buyers Club The compelling true story of a man who turned a life sentence into a
career opportunity. This little indie affair burst from nowhere to have a
big impact at the last Oscars, thanks largely to a virtuoso performance
from the once-maligned (and now-venerated) Matthew McConaughey.
9. Nightcrawler If Jake Gyllenhaal wasn't already the most consistently gifted actor in
the business, this unsettling portrayal of an ambitious TV cameraman
removes all doubt. A movie that gives all white-lying media types the
black-eye they deserve. 10.Force Majeuere An icy cold psychological drama that chills both to and through the
bone. After an avalanche strikes a posh French ski resort, a single
question remains: did one man make a run for it before his wife and
child were out of harm's way?
AND THE NEXT TEN
11. Boyhood 12. Interstellar
13. Nebraska
14. Her
15. Snowpiercer
16. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
17. Paddington 18. The Skeleton Twins
19. Guardians of the Galaxy
20. These Final Hours
With thanks to the Herald Sun And here's another list with some over-laps: A very good year for Matthew McConaughey with three movies in these two lists.
2014 has given us some brilliant
films. Sure there have been a few flops, and even some serious political issues
in the industry such as the trouble between North Korea and Sony following the
studio’s planned release of the film The Interview. But overall, it’s been a
positive year for moviegoers, with a wide choice of blockbusters and more
insightful arthouse films gracing our screens. With so many excellent films to
choose from, the Billionaires team has had a hard time narrowing it
down to just 10 of our favourites, but we’ve done it, so here they are, the
Billionaires top ten films of the year for 2014. Enjoy! Wolf of Wall
Street After winning a bidding war with
Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio paid former New York stockbroker Jordan Belfort $1
million for the rights to become the Wolf of Wall Street. Costing over $100
million (AU$122.3 million) to make, this controversial flick grossed over $392
million worldwide, making it Martin Scorsese’s highest grossing film. Star man
Leo took home around $100 million for his contribution but Jonah Hill, who plays
Jordan’s sleazy sidekick Donnie Azoff, settled for the industry minimum $60,000
– he was just so stoked to be part of a Scorsese movie.
To be honest, how could we not
pick The Wolf of Wall Street for the Billionaires list? This film is
all about excess: excessive wealth, excessive drug taking, excessive risk
taking, excessive sex, excessive swearing and excessive law breaking. DiCaprio
takes the audience on a rollercoaster ride through the world of finance and boy
is it a thrilling journey. Interstellar British director Christopher
Nolan knows how to make a blockbuster. He delivered the hugely successful Batman
Dark Knight trilogy and he crafted the immensely ambitious
dream-in-a-dream-in-a-dream world of Inception. Building on Nolan’s previous
successes, Interstellar is a visually captivating tale on an incredible
scale. Masterminded by scientific genius
Professor Brand (Michael Caine), Nasa pilot Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) embarks
on an intergalactic space journey through a wormhole that was created by an
unknown alien species, in search of a new home for humanity. The making of this movie, which
involved transporting 10,000 pounds worth of mock spaceships to Iceland,
planting 500 acres of corn to be destroyed in an apocalyptic dust scene and the
construction of three complex space crafts, cost $165 million. So far it has
grossed a tremendous $622 million worldwide. That’s what you call a
blockbuster. Boyhood Financially speaking, the $4
million spent on the creation of Boyhood pales in comparison to the budgets of
other films on this list. But when you consider that Ellar Coltrane, the actor
playing the main character in Linklater’s latest flick, started filming at the
tender age of seven and finished the project 11 years later when he was an
18-year-old adolescent it is easy to see what all the fuss is about. Filmed intermittently over an
11-year period, Boyhood is an intimate portrayal of a parent-child relationship
that is unprecedented in scope. It was met with almost unanimous critical
acclaim and took top gong at several film festivals. The Grand Budapest
Hotel Auteur filmmaker Wes Anderson is
known for his fast-paced, character-driven comedies and his distinctive
storybook visual style. The Grand Budapest Hotel is no exception to this trend;
it is a delicious filmic feast of obsessively symmetrical camera shots and
meticulously designed miniature props that are brought to life by the narrator’s
quirky and, at times, melancholy voiceover. Anderson has assembled a
characteristically star-studded cast but particular praise must be given to
actor Ralph Fiennes who plays the hotel’s fastidious concierge with exceptional
vigour and masterful wit. Blue
Jasmine Lauded by critics as Woody
Allen’s best film in years, Blue Jasmine features a famously good performance
from Oscar winner Cate Blanchett as Jasmine, the deluded ex-wife of a fraudulent
financier. It is a fascinating look into the complexities of socialite
culture. When Jasmine’s husband is
imprisoned for running a Ponzi scheme her life begins to unravel. Robbed of her
affluent identity, deluded and arrogant Jasmine struggles to adapt to a life of
little money with her sister Ginger (Sally Hawkins). Tinged with dark humour
throughout, Allen’s expert storytelling and Blanchett’s magnificent acting make
this film a masterpiece of pathos. Haider This modern-day Bollywood
adaption of William Shakespeare’s tragedy Hamlet is a remarkable feat of
flamboyance and subtlety. With the visual resplendence and lively soundtrack
that you would expect from a Bollywood flick, Haider manages to retain the key
plot themes and intricacies of Shakespeare’s classic play, whilst simultaneously
dealing with the controversial contemporary issue of political turmoil in
Kashmir. Polished production values and a
powerful cast add weight to Director Vishal Bhardwaj’s most accomplished movie
to date. 12 Years a
Slave Triple Oscar winner 12 Years a
Slave is not just one of the year’s best films; it is also one of the year’s
most important. This historical drama tells the real life story of Solomon
Northup, a black man kidnapped and sold into slavery in 1841. It is a harrowing
and detailed account of the barbarity of slavery but also of the complex
relationships between master and slave. Shot with virtuoso Spanish
painter Francisco Goya in mind, the film has an exquisite visual quality
atypical to the gritty subject matter. The power and poignancy of 12 Years a
Slave helped it win Best Picture, Best Director (Steve McQueen) and Best
Supporting Actress (Lupita Nyongo’o) at the Oscars, Best Drama at the Golden
Globes and Best Film at the BAFTAS, where formidable Chiwetel Ejiofor also
picked up the award for Best Actor. Nightcrawler An indicting comment on the
erosion of newsroom ethics and the state of the jobs market, this pulse pounding
thriller delivers a raw yet sleek insight into the underbelly of Los
Angeles. Jake Gyllenhaal’s exceptional
performance as Lou Bloom, an amateur filmmaker/ambulance chaser well versed in
the diction of self-help gurus but with little regard for the law, could well
steal the Oscar for Best Actor in the New Year. Lou’s sickly charm and drive for
success help accelerate his ‘career’ at an alarming rate, equalled only by the
blistering speed of the thrilling car chase scene that brings this mesmerising
modern masterpiece to a close. Mandela: Long Walk to
Freedom An inspiring and moving cinematic
account of the great man’s 1995 autobiography of the same name, Mandela: Long
Walk to Freedom chronicles Nelson Mandela’s life-long fight to end apartheid in
South Africa. Worth watching for Idris Elba’s magnetic central performance
alone. The Great
Beauty Winner of Best Foreign Language
Film at the Oscars, the Golden Globes and the British Academy Film Awards, our
final choice is Paolo Sorrentino’s luxuriant depiction of Rome during the
Berlusconi years and it demands your attention. The Great Beauty, or La Grande
Bellezza in Italian, is a gorgeous reflection on the decadent life of prodigal
novelist turned gossip columnist Jep Gambardella (Toni Servillo). Though adorned
with nonpareil memories of lavish parties and exclusive social events, Jep
starts to question the purpose of his life when he learns that his first love
has passed away. This list with thanks to Billionaires Australia
Grand Budapest Hotel amid BAFTA contenders
COMIC confection The
Grand Budapest Hotel is the surprise front runner for the British Academy Film
Awards, while English acting darlings Eddie Redmayne and Benedict Cumberbatch
are competing in the best-actor category.
WES Anderson's Hotel received 11
nominations on Friday, including best picture and best director.
Ralph Fiennes was
nominated for best actor as the unflappable concierge of a chaotic European
hostelry.
Acting nominees also
include Michael Keaton, as a washed-up actor aiming for a comeback in Birdman.
The Alejandro Inarritu-directed movie was nominated in 10 categories, as was
James Marsh's The Theory of Everything, which stars Redmayne as physicist
Stephen Hawking.
Redmayne said his acting
nomination was "beyond imagination".
He insisted he felt no
rivalry with Cumberbatch, who was nominated for playing World War II code
breaker Alan Turing in The Imitation Game. That film received nine
nominations.
"One can try and create a
rivalry but it will not happen!" Redmayne said from Los Angeles.
"We both absolutely
understand people wanting to pitch us against each other, but we are old, old
friends and I think he is the most wonderful actor. He is sensational in The
Imitation Game and I love watching him. "
Jake Gyllenhaal is also
nominated for his performance as a sleazy journalist in Nightcrawler.
But there was no
recognition for Timothy Spall, whose performance as artist JMW Turner in Mr
Turner took the best-actor prize at Cannes.
Best-actress contenders
are Felicity Jones for The Theory of Everything, Amy Adams for Big Eyes,
Julianne Moore for Still Alice, Rosamund Pike for Gone Girl and Reese
Witherspoon for Wild.
Other front runners
include Richard Linklater's decade-spanning Boyhood and Damien Chazelle's
drumming drama Whiplash. They have five nominations each.
The best-picture nominees
are Birdman, Boyhood, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game and The
Theory of Everything.
The separate category of
best British picture includes The Imitation Game and The Theory of Everything
alongside tense Northern Ireland drama '71, alien chiller Under the Skin and
animated ursine adventure Paddington.
Winners of the awards,
known as BAFTAs, will be decided by 6500 members of the British film academy and
announced at London's Royal Opera House on February 8.
The British prizes are seen as
an indicator of likely success at Hollywood's Academy Awards, whose nominees are
announced next week.