Zoe Saldana and Kieran Culkin win supporting actor gongs at Bafta film awards

Zoe Saldana and Kieran Culkin win supporting actor gongs at Bafta film awards
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Zoe Saldana and Kieran Culkin win supporting actor gongs at Bafta film awards
Author: Charlotte McLaughlin
Published: Feb, 16 2025 18:32

American actor Kieran Culkin and actress Zoe Saldana have been named the winners in the supporting actor categories at the Bafta film awards. Culkin, 42, won for his role in Jesse Eisenberg’s comedy drama A Real Pain, while Saldana won for her role in Netflix film Emilia Perez. Culkin did not attend the ceremony on Sunday, and his co-star and the film’s director Eisenberg accepted on his behalf, joking that it was “like the fifth” one he has done for the actor.

Image Credit: The Standard

“We have a similar life, but his is 20% better than mine,” he added. An emotional Saldana, 46, thanked her mother for “being such a selfless person”, before breaking down in tears, and added: “Films are supposed to change minds, and challenge hearts.”. Elsewhere, animated film Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl was named the winner of the children’s and family film award at the ceremony, which is being held at the Royal Festival Hall at London’s Southbank Centre for the second year.

Image Credit: The Standard

The children’s and family film award is a new category this year, and the first new category to be introduced to the EE Bafta film awards in five years. The Aardman film also won the Bafta for animated film, with director Nick Park joking: “I didn’t actually write a second speech.”. Also taking home gongs at the ceremony, hosted for a second year by Doctor Who and Rivals star David Tennant, was Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part Two, which won the first award of the night when it scored the prize for special visual effects.

Image Credit: The Standard

Stars of Netflix film Emilia Perez, Selena Gomez and Saldana, presented the outstanding debut by a British writer, director, and producer award to Kneecap director Rich Peppiatt. British director Peppiatt said “it’s funny how life works”, before saying that he met his wife, and then moved to Belfast, and that was where he met Northern Irish rap trio Kneecap. He added that Kneecap was a “movement”, and “everyone should have their language respected, their culture respected”, following him making the Irish language movie, which was nominated in six Bafta categories.

Musical Emilia Perez was also among the night’s earlier winners, winning the gong for film not in the English language, having been the second-most nominated title at this year’s Bafta film awards, with 11 nominations in total. Accepting the prize the film’s French director Jacques Audiard said he was “touched”, and said the prize “was for everyone who worked tirelessly on this film”. He also paid tribute to his fellow nominees from Ireland’s Kneecap and Brazil’s I’m Not There.

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