Weather Tonight: 7°c Light showers Morning: 12°c Sunny spells

Five of the Best...Films
1. Green Zone
Paul 'Bourne Identity' Greengrass teams up with Matt Damon again to make a truly great Iraq war movie
2. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
Stieg Larsson’s excellent thriller is faithfully brought to the screen — the final act is gobsmackingly gripping
3. Shutter Island
Martin Scorsese’s tribute to Fifties noir contains just enough signature style
4. A Prophet
A stone-cold masterpiece from French director Jacques Audiard about an Arab convict in with the Corsican mafia
5. Precious
Lee Daniels’s astonishing film, beautifully acted by Gabourney Sidibe and Mariah Carey.

Critics' Choice

Theatre

Fiona Mountford

quoteIt’s Day’s night, and no one is going to spoil her storyquote

Fiona Mountford A Sentimental Journey Film

Andrew O'Hagan

quoteThis is a shocking, replenishing film, not to be missedquote

Andrew O'Hagan Green Zone Restaurants

Fay Maschler

quoteIt is great that Bruno Loubet is back — and at prices that are eminently fairquote

Fay Maschler Bistro Bruno Loubet

Reader reviews

Film

Antoine, London

quoteThe action and direction are superb and the acting good, but the plot is so pathetic it defies beliefquote

Green Zone Theatre

Marge

quoteWonderful - beautifully acted and gloriously funny, particularly Simon Russell Beale and Fiona Shawquote

London Assurance Art

Paul

quoteProbably the most important photography exhibition london has ever seenquote

A Positive View: A Landmark Photographic Exhibition

Bond's toughest mission ... his first acting award

By Tom Teodorczuk, Evening Standard 05.02.07

 Add your view

 

The name's Craig. The award-winning Daniel Craig.

The Bond star won best actor for Casino Royale at the Evening Standard British Film Awards. Celebrating a vintage 12 months for British cinema, other winners included United 93, Dame Judi Dench and Borat star Sacha Baron Cohen.

News that Craig, 38, would become the sixth James Bond provoked a mixed reception from Bond fans when it was first announced. But with Casino Royale taking £55 million in Britain alone, the attention paid to Craig's performance has been overwhelmingly positive.

At the ceremony at the Ivy, Craig said he was delighted at being the first actor to win a major award for playing 007.

He said: "This is tremendous. It makes you think that the success of the film might not be a fluke. We wanted to make an exciting and sexy Bond and tell a good yarn at the same time."

Craig, who was accompanied by his girlfriend Satsuki Mitchell, added: "I don't know if I'm ever entirely happy with my performances but I'm happy with the way this turned out."

Commenting on the next Bond film due next year, Craig said: "We made the first one good and we've got to make the second one even better."

Dame Judi Dench - M in Casino Royale - held off a strong challenge from Dame Helen Mirren as The Queen to win best actress for her performance as a stalking teacher in Richard Eyre's Notes On A Scandal.

Collecting the award on behalf of Oscar-nominated Dame Judi, 72, the film's producer Robert Fox joked: "Judi asked me to say this is for all cat-loving lesbians."

Best film went to United 93, about the hijacked September 11 plane whose passengers fought back, which was made by UK film company Working Title and directed by Paul Greengrass.

He said: "It's been a fine year for British films and I'm glad to be part of it. We go to the cinema to be entertained but everybody knows for cinema to be alive, it has to engage with what is going on in the world and United 93 is one of those films that does this."

Following his Golden Globe victory last month, Sacha Baron Cohen won the Peter Sellers award for comedy for his hit creation Borat.

Director Stephen Frears won the Alexander Walker special award for his contribution to British film. His credits include My Beautiful Launderette and Dangerous Liaisons in the Eighties, The Grifters and Mary Reilly in the Nineties and The Queen, for which he is nominated for an Oscar.

Frears said: "There's been no plan. I'm just drawn to interesting scripts and making films which entertain people."

Peter Morgan won best screenplay for The Queen and The Last King Of Scotland, just two months after his play Frost/Nixon won the editor's award at the Standard Theatre Awards.

Cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle won the technical achievement award for The Last King Of Scotland and Brothers Of The Head.

Writer-director Paul Andrew Williams was most promising newcomer for his debut London To Brighton, which he made for £80,000.

He said: "It's less than 18 months since we made London To Brighton and I had no idea this would ever happen."

The Evening Standard British Film Award winners

Best film: United 93
Best actor: Daniel Craig, Casino Royale
Best actress: Judi Dench, Notes On A Scandal
The Peter Sellers award for comedy: Sacha Baron Cohen for Borat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation Of Kazakhstan
Best screenplay: Peter Morgan, The Queen and The Last King Of Scotland
Technical achievement: Anthony Dod Mantle for his cinematography on The Last King Of Scotland and Brothers Of The Head
Most promising newcomer: Paul Andrew Williams for his direction of London To Brighton
The Alexander Walker special award: Stephen Frears for making British film reverberate around the world


Bookmark and Share
 

Related articles

More

 

 

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
 
 
London's Weather
Tonight
Light showers
7°c
Morning
Sunny spells
12°c
5 day forecast
 
 

Daily Mail Mail on Sunday Travel Mail This is Money Metro

Loot | Jobsite | Homes & Property | London jobs | Educate London | Holiday Villas