BAFTA Award for Best Documentary
BAFTA Award for Best Documentary | |
---|---|
Awarded for | In recognition of the number of high-quality theatrical documentaries released in cinemas |
Country | United Kingdom |
Presented by | British Academy of Film and Television Arts |
First awarded | 1948 |
Currently held by | 20 Days in Mariupol (2023) |
Website | BAFTA Website |
This page lists the winners for the BAFTA Award for Best Documentary, formerly known as the Robert Flaherty Documentary Award, for each year.
In the following lists, the titles and names in bold with a gold background are the winners and recipients respectively; those not in bold are the nominees. The years given are those in which the films under consideration were released, not the year of the ceremony, which always takes place the following year.
History
[edit]The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA), is a British organisation that hosts annual awards shows for film, television, children's film and television, and interactive media. A theatrical documentary award was presented by the Academy between 1948 and 1990. Documentaries have continued to be honoured with British Academy Television Awards since then and have been eligible in all relevant categories at the Film Awards. In 2012, the Academy re-introduced this category in recognition of the number of high-quality theatrical documentaries released in cinemas in the UK each year.[1]
Winners and nominees
[edit]1940s
[edit]Year | Film | Director |
---|---|---|
1948
(2nd) |
Louisiana Story | Robert J. Flaherty |
Farrebique | Georges Rouquier | |
Is Everybody Listening? | Jackson Beck | |
Shadow of the Ruhr | Sergei Nolbandov | |
Those Blasted Kids | Astrid Henning-Jensen and Bjarne Henning-Jensen | |
Three Dawns to Sydney | John Eldridge | |
1949
(3rd) |
Daybreak in Udi | Terry Bishop |
Circulation | ||
The Cornish Engine | Bill Mason and Philip Armitage | |
Drug Addict | Robert Anderson | |
Island of the Lagoon (Isole Nella Laguna) | Luciano Emmer and Enrico Gras | |
The Liver Fluke in Great Britain | John Shearman | |
Report on the Refugee Problem |
1950s
[edit]Year | Film | Director |
---|---|---|
1950
(4th) |
The Undefeated | Paul Dickson |
Inland Waterways | R.K. Neilson-Baxter | |
Kon-Tiki | Thor Heyerdahl | |
Green is the Mountain (La Montagne est Verte) | Jean Lehérissey | |
Seal Island | James Algar | |
The Vatican | Hans M. Nieter | |
Life Begins Tomorrow (La Vie Commence Demain) | Nicole Védrès | |
1951
(5th) |
Beaver Valley | James Algar |
Visit to Picasso (Bezoek aan Picasso) | Paul Haesaerts | |
David | Paul Dickson | |
A Family Affair | Margaret Thomson | |
Family Portrait | Humphrey Jennings | |
Oil for the Twentieth Century | Peter Bradford | |
Out of True | Philip Leacock | |
1952
(6th) |
Royal Journey | David Bairstow, Gudrun Parker and Roger Blais |
Fishermen of Negombo | ||
Highlights of Farnborough 1952 | Peter De Normanville | |
Journey into History | John Taylor | |
Le Mans 1952 | Bill Mason | |
Nature's Half Acre | James Algar | |
Ocean Terminal | J.B. Holmes | |
The Open Window | Henri Storck | |
Opera School | Gudrun Parker | |
Rig 20 | David Villiers and Ronald H. Riley | |
The Streamlined Pig | Jørgen Roos | |
1953
(7th) |
The Conquest of Everest | George Lowe |
White Mane (Crin Blanc) | Albert Lamorisse | |
Elizabeth is Queen | Terry Ashwood | |
Pictures of the Middle Ages (Images Medievales) | ||
Kumak, The Sleepy Hunter | Alma Duncan | |
Mille Miglia | Bill Mason | |
Operation Hurricane | Ronald Stark | |
A Queen Is Crowned | Christopher Fry | |
Teeth of the Wind | ||
Life in the Arctic (Vo l'dakh Okeana) | Aleksandr Zguridi | |
Water Birds | Ben Sharpsteen | |
World Without End | ||
1954
(8th) |
The Great Adventure (Det Stora Äventyret) | Arne Sucksdorff |
Back of Beyond | John Heyer | |
Lekko! | Herman van der Horst | |
3-2-1-Zero | ||
Thursday's Children | Guy Brenton and Lindsay Anderson | |
1955
(9th) |
The Vanishing Prairie | James Algar |
Gold | Colin Low | |
Miner's Window | John Ferno | |
The Rival World | Bert Haanstra | |
1956
(10th) |
On the Bowery | Lionel Rogosin |
Foothold in Antarctica | Derek Williams | |
Generator 4 | F. R. Crawley | |
The Silent World (Le Monde Du Silence) | Jacques Cousteau and Louis Malle | |
Under the Same Sky | Kurt Weber | |
1957
(11th) |
Journey into Spring | Ralph Keene |
City of Gold | Colin Low and Wolf Koenig | |
Every Day Except Christmas | Lindsay Anderson | |
Holiday | ||
The USA in the Thirties | ||
1958
(12th) |
Glass (Glas) | Bert Haanstra |
The Forerunner | John Heyer | |
Jabulani Afrika | Jamie Uys | |
LS Lowry | John Read | |
Secrets of the Reef | Murray Lerner, Lloyd Ritter and Robert M. Young | |
Wonders of Chicago | Harry Foster | |
1959
(13th) |
The Savage Eye | Joseph Strick, Sidney Meyers and Ben Maddow |
This is the BBC | Richard Cawston | |
We Are the Lambeth Boys | Karel Reisz | |
White Wilderness | James Algar |
1960s
[edit]Year | Film | Recipient(s) |
---|---|---|
1960
(14th) |
Not awarded | |
1961
(15th) |
Volcano (Le Rendezvous du diable) | Haroun Tazieff |
1962
(16th) |
Not awarded | |
1963
(17th) | ||
1964
(18th) |
Nobody Waved Good-bye | Don Owen |
The Human Dutch | Bert Haanstra | |
The Life of Billy Walker | ||
Portrait of Queenie | Michael Orrom | |
1965
(19th) |
Tokyo Olympiad | Kon Ichikawa |
Brute Force and Finesse | Max Morgan-Witts | |
Deckie Learner | Michael Grigsby | |
Stravinsky | Roman Kroitor and Wolf Koenig | |
1966
(20th) |
Goal! The World Cup | Abidine Dino and Ross Devenish |
Buster Keaton Rides Again | John Spotton | |
I'm Going to Ask You to Get Up Out of Your Seat | Richard Cawston | |
Matador | Kevin Billington | |
1967
(21st) |
To Die in Madrid | Frédéric Rossif |
Famine | Jack Gold | |
The Things I Cannot Change | Tanya Ballantyne | |
1968
(22nd) |
In Need of Special Care | Jonathan Stedall |
Inside North Vietnam | Felix Greene | |
Music! | Michael Tuchner | |
A Plague On Your Children | Adrian Malone | |
1969
(23rd) |
Prologue | Robin Spry |
1970s
[edit]Year | Film | Recipient(s) |
---|---|---|
1970
(24th) |
Sad Song of Yellow Skin | Michael Rubbo |
1971
(25th) |
The Hellstrom Chronicle | Walon Green |
Death of a Legend | Bill Mason | |
1972
(26th) |
Not awarded | |
1973
(27th) |
Grierson | Roger Blais |
1974
(28th) |
Cree Hunters of Mistassini | Boyce Richardson and Tony Ianzelo |
Compañero: Victor Jara of Chile | Stanley Forman and Martin Smith | |
Leprosy | ||
1975
(29th) |
The Early Americans | Alan Pendry |
Seven Green Bottles | Eric Marquis | |
1976
(30th) |
Los Canadienses | Albert Kish |
White Rock | Tony Maylam | |
1977
(31st) |
Not awarded | |
1978
(32nd) |
The Silent Witness | David Rolfe |
1979
(33rd) |
The Tree of Wooden Clogs | Ermanno Olmi |
1980s
[edit]Year | Film | Recipient(s) |
---|---|---|
1980
(34th) |
Not awarded | |
1981
(35th) |
Soldier Girls | Nick Broomfield and Joan Churchill |
Best Boy | Ira Wohl | |
The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter | Connie Field | |
Return Journey | Ian Potts | |
1982
(36th) |
Burden of Dreams | Les Blank |
The Atomic Café | Kevin Rafferty, Jayne Loader and Pierce Rafferty | |
Not a Love Story | Bonnie Sherr Klein | |
The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time! | Jim Brown | |
1983
(37th) |
Schindler | Jon Blair |
Forty Minutes: Female Circumcision | Louise Panton | |
The Visit: Part 3 - The Boy David | Alex McCall | |
Wildlife on One: Night Life | Dilys Breese | |
1984
(38th) |
28 Up | Michael Apted |
GI Brides | Lavinia Warner | |
South Bank Show: Alan Bennett | David Hinton | |
Afghanistan Reports: Allah Against The Gunships | Sandy Gall | |
1985
(39th) |
Omnibus: Leonard Berstein's West Side Story | Christopher Swann |
Marilyn Monroe: Say Goodbye to the President | Christopher Olgiati | |
David Lean: A Life in Film | Nigel Wattis | |
The Frozen Ocean: Part 1 - Kingdom of the Ice Bear | Mike Salisbury and Hugh Miles | |
1986
(40th) |
Shoah | Claude Lanzmann |
Viewpoint '86: Afghanistan: The Agony of a Nation | Sandy Gall | |
Omnibus: The Mission | Robin Lough | |
Forty Minutes: The Fishing Party | Paul Watson | |
Equinox: Prisoner of Consciousness | John Dollar | |
British Cinema: Personal View - A Turnip Head's Guide to the British Cinema | Alan Parker | |
1987
(41st) |
Baka - People of The Rain Forest | Phil Agland |
Man-Eating Tigers/Saving the Tiger | Naresh Bedi | |
Fourteen Days in May | Paul Hamann | |
Forty Minutes: Home from the Hill | Molly Dineen | |
1988
(42nd) |
This Week: Death on the Rock | Chris Oxley |
The Duty Men: East Enders | Paul Hamann | |
In from the Cold: A Portrait of Richard Burton | Tony Palmer | |
Viewpoint Special: The Men Who Killed Kennedy | Nigel Turner | |
1989
(43rd) |
First Tuesday: Four Hours in My Lai | Kevin Sim |
Viewpoint '89: Cambodia - Year 10: A Special Report by John Pilger | David Munro | |
Lost Children of the Empire | Joanna Mack and Mike Fox | |
Everyman: Romania - State of Fear | John Blake |
2010s
[edit]2020s
[edit]See also
[edit]- Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature
- Golden Globe Award for Best Documentary Film
- Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject
- British Academy Television Award for Best Single Documentary
References
[edit]- ^ Documentary category added to Orange British Academy Film Awards, BAFTA.org. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
- ^ Reynolds, Simon (12 February 2012). "Orange BAFTA Film Awards 2012 winners list - in full". Digital Spy. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Brooks, Xan (11 February 2013). "Baftas 2013 – as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 June 2021.
- ^ A Grammy for Big Easy Express, a BAFTA for Sugar Man|Music Film News
- ^ "Baftas: Gravity and 12 Years a Slave share glory". BBC News. 17 February 2014. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Brown, Mark (8 February 2015). "Baftas 2015: Boyhood wins top honours but Grand Budapest Hotel checks out with most". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Lodderhose, Diana (14 February 2016). "'The Revenant,' Leonardo DiCaprio Dominate BAFTA Awards". Variety. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Amy Winehouse documentary 'Amy' wins Bafta - ITV News
- ^ Grater, Tom. "Baftas 2017: 'La La Land' scoops five as 'Moonlight', 'Nocturnal Animals' are shutout". Screendaily. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Baftas 2017: full list of winners|Film|The Guardian
- ^ "Bafta Film Awards 2018: Three Billboards wins top prizes". BBC. 19 February 2018. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Nordine, Michael (10 February 2019). "BAFTA Awards 2019: 'Roma' Wins Best Film as 'The Favourite' Takes Home the Most Prizes". Indiewire. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ The full list of winners at the 2019 Bafta film awards|Film|The Guardian
- ^ "Baftas 2020: Sam Mendes film 1917 dominates awards". BBC. 2 February 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ Bafta Film Awards 2020: The winners in full - BBC News
- ^ Shoard, Catherine (12 April 2021). "Baftas 2021: Nomadland wins big as Promising Young Woman and Anthony Hopkins surprise". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
- ^ BAFTA Film Award Winners 2021 – Full List|IndieWire
- ^ "2022 EE British Academy Film Awards: Nominations". BAFTA. 11 January 2022. Archived from the original on 3 February 2022. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
- ^ "2022 EE British Academy Film Awards: Nominations". BAFTA. Archived from the original on 3 February 2022. Retrieved 2023-01-17.
- ^ Baftas 2023: the complete list of winners|Baftas 2023|The Guardian
- ^ "Nominations Announced for the 2024 EE BAFTA Film Awards" (Press release). BAFTA. 18 January 2024. Retrieved 18 January 2024.