BAFTA Scotland Awards 2008
2008 BAFTA Scotland Awards
2008 BAFTA Scotland (aka Scottish Bafta) award winners: Glasgow, November 9, 2008
("*" denotes the winner in each category)
In Kenneth Glenaan’s Summer, a broken man (Robert Carlyle) remembers a fateful summer.
Feature Film
Outpost
Directed by Steve Barker
Produced by Kieran Parker & Arabella Page-Croft
Black Camel Pictures/ Sony Pictures
Stone of Destiny
Directed by Charles Martin Smith
Produced by Andrew Boswell & Robert Merilees
The Mob Film Company/ Infinity Features
* Summer
Directed by Kenneth Glenaan Produced by Camilla Bray
Sixteen Films/ Vertigo Films
Acting Performance in Film
Alia Alzougbi
Trouble Sleeping
Theatre Workshop/ Makar Productions
Robert Carlyle
Summer
Sixteen Films/ Vertigo Films
* Brian Cox
The Escapist
Picture Farm/ Parallel Films
Directing in Film or Television
Iain Davidson
Gary’s War
The Comedy Unit for Channel 4
Roger Gartland
Rebus
SMG Productions for ITV1
* Kenneth Glenaan
Summer
Sixteen Films/ Vertigo Films
Adrian Shergold
Fiona’s [...]
by Andre Soares | November 9, 2008
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Tags: Adrian McDowall, Adrian Shergold, Alia Alzougbi, Anders Jedenfors, BAFTA Scotland Awards, BAFTA Scotland Awards 2008, Bill's Visitors, Brian Cox, Charles Martin Smith, Film Awards, Finlay Pretsell, Fiona's Story, Gary's War, Iain Davidson, Irene, Island, Jamie Stone, Jila Peacock, Kenneth Glenaan, Lindsay Goodall, Ma Bar, Mark Littlewood, Matt Palmer, Mike Alexander, Morag Ross, Outpost, Phoo Action, Robert Carlyle, Scottish Cinema, Simon Deshon, Steve Barker, Stone of Destiny, Summer, The Escapist, The World According To, Tongue of the Hidden, Trouble Sleeping, Ugly Betty
BAFTA Scotland Awards 2007
2007 BAFTA Scotland Awards
2007 BAFTA Scotland (aka Scottish Bafta) award winners: City Halls in Glasgow on November 18, 2007
("*" denotes the winner in each category)
The Last King of Scotland, an early 2007 release in the United Kingdom, was the big winner at the 2007 BAFTA Scotland awards. Directed by Kevin Macdonald and written by Peter Morgan and Jeremy Brock, the fictional drama revolves around the complex relationship between a Scottish doctor (BAFTA winner James McAvoy) and Uganda dictator Idi Amin Dada (Forest Whitaker). The American Whitaker — despite having received raves and assorted awards elsewhere earlier in the year (as a 2006 release in the U.S.) — was deemed ineligible for the Scottish BAFTAs, as the awards are geared to [...]
by Andre Soares | November 18, 2007
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Tags: Alice Nelson, Anders Jedenfors, Angus Peter Campbell, Aonghas MacNeacail, Aonghas Padraig Caimbeul, BAFTA Scotland Awards, BAFTA Scotland Awards 2007, Bill Paterson, Breadmakers, Butterfly, Consenting Adults, Darren Price, David MacKenzie, Ed Whitmore, Eddie McConnell, Film Awards, Forest Whitaker, Hallam Foe, Haunted Hogmanay, Iain F MacLeod, Ishbel T MacDonald, James McAvoy, Jamie Bell, Jane McCarry, Jeremy Brock, Jo Cockwell, Julian Mitchell, Kevin Macdonald, Losing Myself: Annie, Michelle Gomez, Neil Jack, Peter Morgan, Potapych - The Bear who loved Vodka, Robbie Coltrane, Scottish Cinema, Sea of Souls, Seachd - The Inaccessible Pinnacle, Sean Biggerstaff, Simon Miller, Sophia Myles, Still Game, The Last King of Scotland, Two Dreams, Wedding Belles, Yasmin Fedda, Yulia Mahr
