“On the Western Front without change” won seven BAFTA awards
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The drama “On the Western Front Without Changes”, directed by the German director Edward Berger based on the novel of the same name by Erich Maria Remarque, won seven nominations for the British Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (BAFTA) award.
The picture was recognized as the best film, and prizes were awarded in the categories “Best Film in a Foreign Language”, “Best Adapted Screenplay”, “Best Sound”, “Best Music for the Film” and “Best Cinematography”. Berger himself won the prize for best director.
Accepting awards for this film about the First World War, he recalled those who are now fighting for Ukraine.
“On the Western Front without change” is the first adaptation of the novel, shot in Germany. The film was shortlisted for the Oscar in the category “Best Foreign Language Film”.
The films “Banshee Inysheryna” and “Elvis” – a biographical film about Elvis Presley – received four BAFTA prizes each. Austin Butler, who played Elvis, became the best actor in a leading role according to BAFTA.
- Remarque’s anti-war novel “On the Western Front Without Change”, published in Germany in 1929, was almost immediately banned in a number of European countries, but was adapted into a Hollywood film. The film, shot by Lewis Milestone already in 1930, received two “Oscars”. The next request for adaptation of the novel was the television version by Delbert Mann in 1979. She received the “Golden Globe”.
- The British Academy of Film and Television Arts Award (BAFTA) has been awarded since 1948 in London.
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