BAFTA TV Awards 2015 Winners List
Sherlock, True Detective and Marvellous were among the winners at the BAFTA Television Awards ceremony in London last night. In a night of varied winners there were a few surprises with Benedict Cumberbatch being yet again denied a best actor BAFTA. Jason Watkins and Georgina Campbell took home the top acting prizes for leading actor and actress. Full List of winners below for all categories:
LEADING ACTOR Jason Watkins The Lost Honour of Christopher Jefferies
LEADING ACTRESS Georgina Campbell Murdered by My Boyfriend
ENTERTAINMENT PERFORMANCE Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway
SCRIPTED COMEDY Detectorists Production Team
SINGLE DRAMA Marvellous
REALITY & CONSTRUCTED FACTUAL The Island With Bear Grylls
FEMALE PERFORMANCE IN A COMEDY PROGRAM Jessica Hynes W1A
RADIO TIMES AUDIENCE AWARD Sherlock
SPECIALIST FACTUAL Grayson Perry: Who Are You?
MALE PERFORMANCE IN A COMEDY PROGRAM Matt Berry Toast of London
DRAMA SERIES Happy Valley
SOAP & CONTINUING DRAMA Coronation Street
SUPPORTING ACTRESS Gemma Jones Marvellous
COMEDY AND COMEDY ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAM The Graham Norton Show
SUPPORTING ACTOR Stephen Rea The Honourable Woman
CURRENT AFFAIRS Children on the Frontline (Dispatches) Production Team
SPORT & LIVE EVENT WW1 Remembered
SINGLE DOCUMENTARY The Paedophile Hunter
FEATURES Grand Designs Production Team
NEWS COVERAGE SKY News Live at Five: Ebola
INTERNATIONAL True Detective
FACTUAL SERIES Life and Death Row
MINI-SERIES The Lost Honour of Christopher Jefferies
ENTERTAINMENT PROGRAM Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway
London Has Fallen Teaser Poster
The first poster for Olympus Has Fallen sequel, London Has Fallen has landed (or ‘fallen’ if you’ll excuse the pun…) online. London Has Fallen reunites Gerard Butler and Aaron Eckhart as the President (Eckhart) and his trusty guard Mike Banning and transfers them to London, with Morgan Freeman also returning.
If this first teaser poster is anything to go by, we’re in for more of the same action and excitement from Olympus Has Fallen only bigger, in a story that centres around a plot to assassinate all the world leaders as they attend the Prime Ministers funeral. London Has Fallen is due for release on October 2.
Big Game Review
The Plot
On the eve of his 13th birthday, Oskari (Onni Tommila) is sent into the Finnish woodlands alone to capture and kill the biggest game he can find. But, when the President of the USA (Samuel L Jackson) drops out of the sky after an attack on Air Force One, these two unlikely allies must join together to survive the night and evade capture from the terrorists in search of them.
The Good
When you’ve got Samuel L Jackson playing the President of the United States of America in a Finnish action movie, there’s not much that can go wrong. And when it’s directed by the same man who brought a Santa Clause horror movie to our screens (Jalmari Helander – Rare Exports) the hands you’re in become even safer.
Big Game is everything you would expect from an action film whose main selling point is that Samuel L Jackson IS the President. It’s big, loud and a huge amount of fun. Whether it be Jim Broadbent pottering around the typical response bunker eating a cheese sandwich while trying to save the president, or Jackson himself giving his usual Jackson-esque reactions to utterly absurd idea of a plot line that unfolds in front of your eyes – at one point he even screams the thing we’re all thinking; ‘we gon’ die!’ . There are enough nuggets of pure undiluted entertainment peppered throughout this insane film to ensure your time isn’t wasted.
The whole film feels like a loving throwback to early action films like Die Hard and even more recent examples such as White House Down and Olympus Has Fallen. The main antagonist (Mehmet Kurtulus) in particular feels at times that he could be a distant relative of Alan Rickman’s iconic Hans Gruber, giving off the same airs and graces that Rickman did in his performance. Which leads us to one of the film’s few downfalls…
The Bad
Though Kurtulus does bring an incredibly suave performance to the screen, he is nowhere near as developed a villain as someone like Rickman’s Gruber. Of course, topping one of the best villain performances of 80s action movies is hard to do. Though Kurtulus plays a villain impressively described as an ‘apolitical heir to wealth’, a man who believes in nothing and follows no one, the film does’t quite do enough to show this during his modest screen time.
The Ugly Truth
One glance at the poster for Big Game and you know what you’re in for, big boisterous fun with touches of humour. Those that accept the film for what it is may just and enjoy the ride, might just find themselves eager for a seemingly inevitable sequel as the final credit role
Review by Johnny Ellis
Age Of Adaline Review
The Plot
After a lightning bolt hits her during a fatal car crash, Adaline Bowman (Blake Lively) becomes immune to the ravages of time. However, her invincibility hinders her life more than it helps, making it difficult to grow attached to anyone. But when she meets Ellis (Michiel Huisman) one New Years Eve, an old flame from the past arrives too…
The Good
Blake Lively brings a much needed air of grace and elegance to the titular character of Adaline and makes you believe throughout her performance, that she has indeed lived through all the years that Adaline has. Lively brings an attitude that fits perfectly with the role, like she’s from another era, yet still knows how to blend in with the times.
While the story brings instant recollections of The Curious Case of Benjamin Button mixed with the romantic melodrama of Nickolas Spark, it still stands on its own well enough. Thanks mainly to Lively, but also in part to Harrison Ford, who for the first time in a good while seems less determinedly grumpy to be back on screen. He’s doesn’t seem too happy either, but he certainly appears happier than we’ve been used to from his last few films. Perhaps JJ Abrams has something to do with it…
The Bad
Though the set-up is interesting, the fact that it takes Michiel Huisman’s Ellis Brown to change Adaline’s entire perspective on her life feels a bit too out of synch. There’s no denying Huisman’s looks, but for years Adaline has been avoiding any attachments other than that of her daughter, changing identity every few years to escape any emotions. But apparently all it takes is a couple of dates with Ellis and she’s smitten! Had more time been spent seeing their romance blossom, it might have actually worked.
Then there’s the, at times, irritating addition of the deadpan narrator who takes us through the story in the opening, leaves for about an hour and pops back another couple of times before the end credits. While the opening was understandable, as he explains matter-of-factly, exactly how Adaline’s invincibility comes to be, his reappearance is somewhat jarring.
Finally, towards its third act, Age of Adaline also starts to unroll a storyline which feels better suited for an episode of the Jeremy Kyle show, albeit a much more elegant one. While we can’t delve into too much detail on this without spoiling it, suffice to say, you’ll understand when you get there…
The Ugly Truth
Age of Adaline is a typical romantic drama with a nice, slightly under established premise to it, which works well. What doesn’t work well certainly doesn’t ruin it completely. It’s not an instant classic but it does its job well enough.
Review by Johnny Ellis
Spooks: The Greater Good Review
The Plot
After a terrorist escapes custody, ex MI5 agent Will Holloway (Kit Harrington) is brought in to track down the former disgraced head of MI5 Harry Pearce (Peter Firth) in order to stop an imminent attack on London.
The Good
Last seen on our TV screens nearly four years ago, the hit BBC spy thriller is back, only this time in cinematic form. While elements of the show still seem to be in this new story, The Greater Good focuses on Game of Thrones’ Kit Harrington, playing an, until now, unseen and unheard of character Will Holloway, who seems to be the only man Harry Pearce can trust.
While the show was indeed a huge hit with the BBC, this latest cinematic outing succeeds in making sure that newcomers aren’t completely lost. The Greater Good brings a well shot and action packed british spy thriller which could be put up to the likes of the Bond films, albeit with a smaller budget. Though this budgetary limit of staying in the UK for the storyline gives Spooks something that the Bond films don’t have the privilege of doing. While it’s certainly lovely to see Bond go galavanting off to exotic countries for half the film, in Spooks we’re trapped in dreary, rainy Britain, (save for one scene in Germany) and yet it still holds up and gives the same amount of beautiful cinematography we’ve seen in the likes of Skyfall. Harrington and Firth, meanwhile, make a good on screen duo while David Harewood, Lara Pulver and co. fill out the background as the constantly bickering MI5 suits.
The Bad
Unfortunately, The Greater Good doesn’t appear to bring anything particularly new or extremely interesting to the screen. While this perhaps helps make it more accessible to audiences who aren’t accustomed to the original show, the plot feels at times like a slightly glorified extended episode, which may have been more popular as an event show much like 2013’s Doctor Who 50th anniversary special.
As one of the aforementioned uninitiated, ironically The Greater Good became a slight let down precisely due to the fact that it was too easy to follow. At no point is there any real confusion as to the characters or back story which had been built up over ten series. Leading us to wonder why even bother tying in the Spooks name at all…
The Ugly Truth
Spooks: The Greater Good serves the purpose of a well made british spy thriller and proves we don’t need to be given exotic landscapes to get a good action movie. Though it fails to feel particularly cinematic in terms of its storyline, at least it has the cinematic look about it.
Review by Johnny Ellis