Summary

  • Leonardo DiCaprio's politically charged thriller One Battle After Another leads the field at this year's Bafta Film Awards, with 14 nominations

  • It is closely followed by vampire-horror Sinners, which has 13, Shakespeare-inspired drama Hamnet and table-tennis tale Marty Supreme, which have 11 each

  • Meanwhile, two actors whose absence was most notable at the Oscars - Chase Infiniti and Paul Mescal - have both made it in at the Baftas

  • DiCaprio picks up his seventh nomination for leading actor, tying the all-time record. He's in good company, our culture reporter Lauren Turner writes

  • Actor and TV presenter Alan Cumming will host the awards in London on Sunday 22 February

  • Catch the full list of nominations here

  1. Five things we learnt from the Bafta nominationspublished at 13:49 GMT 27 January

    Lauren Turner
    BBC News

    Chase Infiniti, Leonardo DiCaprio and Teyana Taylor.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Chase Infiniti (L), Leonardo DiCaprio (M) and Teyana Taylor (R) star in One Battle After Another

    The Bafta Films Awards is the last major film organisation to reveal its shortlist this awards season... but it's by no means the least.

    Here are five key things we learnt from today's Bafta nominations reveal:

    1) One Battle After Another leads the field

    There have been a whopping 14 Bafta nominations for the thriller starring Leonardo DiCaprio.

    Vampire horror Sinners, which topped the Oscar nominations last week, follows close behind with 13.

    2) History-making Hamnet

    No other film directed by a woman has received as many nominations in Baftas history, which is quite the achievement.

    That's perhaps just slightly tarnished though by the fact filmmaker Chloé Zhao is the only woman on the shortlist for best director this year, despite five being on the longlist.

    Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley attend at the 31st Annual Critics Choice Awards in Santa Monica, California, earlier this month. Mescal is in a black jacket, while Buckley is wearing a white dress.Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley are both recognised for their performances in Hamnet

    3) The Ballad of Wallis Island gets its flowers

    Our culture editor Katie Razzall says the three nods for this feelgood comedy drama are "richly deserved" - with other fans including Richard Curtis, who's said it's "one of the greatest British films of all time".

    4) Baftas love for stars snubbed by Oscars

    Paul Mescal missed out on a best supporting actor nomination for the Oscars. But he's made up for that today by making the Baftas shortlist, for his portrayal of William Shakespeare in Hamnet.

    Meanwhile, Chase Infiniti, who'd been tipped to get a best actress for One Battle After Another, also gets nominated.

    5) Leo joins Hollywood greats with seven career nominations

    Leonardo DiCaprio is in good company as he hits seven Bafta nominations in the leading actor category - tying the all-time record with Michael Caine, Daniel Day-Lewis, Peter Finch, Dustin Hoffman, Jack Lemmon and Laurence Olivier.

    We're now wrapping up this live page. The Bafta Film Awards will take place on 22 February at London's Royal Festival Hall. Until then, you can continue reading with our latest story.

  2. This year's Bafta film nominations in summarypublished at 13:29 GMT 27 January

    Leonardo DiCaprio-led revolutionary caper One Battle After Another is at the front of the pack, with 14 nominations in total for this year's Bafta Film Awards.

    It's closely followed by director Ryan Coogler's vampire drama Sinners, with 13. Hamnet and Marty Supreme are next, each with 11 nominations.

    Chart showing the 11 films with the most Bafta nominations in 2026, headed by One Battle After Another with 14 nominations represented by 14 gold rings, Sinners with 13, Hamnet and Marty Supreme with 11 each, Frankenstein and Sentimental Value with 8, Bugonia and I Swear with 5, and F1, Pillion and The Ballad of Wallis Island all with 3.
  3. Stellar performances from Bafta's rising starspublished at 13:14 GMT 27 January

    Lauren Turner
    BBC News

    Chase InfinitiImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Chase Infiniti is nominated for best actress and rising star

    There is a great showing from a constellation of Bafta's rising stars this year, with six former or current nominees up for awards in the acting categories.

    They are: Robert Aramayo, Jessie Buckley, Timothée Chalamet, Jacob Elordi, Chase Infiniti and Carey Mulligan.

    The nominees for this year’s EE rising star award were announced on 14 January as Archie Madekwe, Chase Infiniti, Miles Caton, Posy Sterling and Aramayo. It’s the only award voted for by the British public.

    Three former and current Bafta breakthroughs also get nominations this year: Buckley, Infiniti and Akinola Davies Jr.

  4. Sentimental Value leads a European cinema wavepublished at 13:05 GMT 27 January

    Tom Brook
    Talking Movies presenter

    Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas and Elle Fanning taking a selfie in a still from Sentimental ValueImage source, Kasper Tuxen Andersen/Mubi

    I think there's a bit of an interesting story here that it's easy to miss, and that is Sentimental Value. That film got nine Oscar nominations last week, and it got eight today.

    I think we've got to pay attention to the ascendancy of European cinema.

    What's interesting is that, both with Bafta and the Academy Awards, voters have recognised European cinema like never before.

    Sentimental Value is a small Norwegian film, a family drama. It has great people in it, like Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning.

  5. What each acting category has in common this yearpublished at 13:00 GMT 27 January

    Lauren Turner
    BBC News

    Emma Stone in character in Bugonia - she has a shaved head and wears a flowery dress and gold chain - she is sitting in a room, in a wooden chairImage source, Universal
    Image caption,

    Emma Stone (pictured here in Bugonia) has been nominated in the leading actress category

    Here’s a fun little fact - every acting category this year includes one person who has previously won the award, one who has been nominated and one who’s a first-time nominee.

    So, for example, in the leading actress category there is debut nominee Chase Infiniti, former nominee Kate Hudson and former winner Emma Stone.

    It’s the same for best supporting actress, leading actor and best supporting actor.

  6. Best supporting actress is good for Britspublished at 12:52 GMT 27 January

    Ian Youngs
    Culture reporter

    Wunmi Mosaku in a bright yellow dress at the Golden GlobesImage source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    Wunmi Mosaku is among the nominees for best supporting actress

    Half of the six nominees for best supporting actress are British - the highest of any acting category.

    They include Wunmi Mosaku for Sinners, following her Oscar nomination last week.

    She’s joined by two established names - Carey Mulligan (The Ballad of Wallis Island) and Emily Watson (Hamnet).

    The category also includes Sweden’s Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas (Sentimental Value), Odessa A’zion (Marty Supreme) and fellow US rising star Teyana Taylor (One Battle After Another).

    Teyana will probably be the one to beat, but Wunmi could provide a home win, nine years after she won a Bafta TV award for Damilola, Our Loved Boy.

  7. Cynthia Erivo fails to make shortlistpublished at 12:44 GMT 27 January

    Lauren Turner
    Culture reporter

    Cynthia Erivo, wearing a black feathered dress, holds hands with Ariana Grande, wearing a black and white strapless dress, in front of a sign just seen reading Wicked: For Good - they are both looking off cameraImage source, Getty Images

    It was one of the most-anticipated releases of 2025 but Wicked: For Good has only picked up two nominations, in the costume design and make-up and hair categories.

    Cynthia Erivo had made the Baftas longlist for leading actress with her portrayal of Elphaba Thropp, but doesn’t appear on the shortlist of six.

    She was nominated in the same category last year for the first Wicked film.

    And there’s no nod for Ariana Grande either, for best supporting actress, after she was named in the longlist for that category.

  8. Analysis

    Only one female director makes shortlistpublished at 12:37 GMT 27 January

    Katie Razzall
    Culture editor

    Chloe Zhao wears an ice blue silk outfit with a diamond choker-style necklace - she has small plaits in her long dark hair - she is standing on a red carpet with photographers just seen in the backgroundImage source, Getty Images

    Hamnet has broken a record today as the most nominated film directed by a woman in Bafta history.

    A well-deserved nominations haul for a British film that is doing well at the box office.

    But the record can’t mask the wider issue that - aside from Zhao - no other female director made it on to the shortlist.

    In recent years, Bafta has tried to address the gender imbalances, particularly prevalent in the directing category, by ensuring equality on the 10-strong longlist, with five male and five female directors chosen.

    But for the second time in two years, Bafta voters opted to oust four of the five female directors in favour of five men and one woman making the shortlist.

  9. Hamnet's Jessie Buckley has best actress in the bagpublished at 12:34 GMT 27 January

    Ian Youngs
    Culture reporter

    Jessie Buckley.Image source, HamnetUniversal

    Every year, there’s one star who sweeps the same prize at every ceremony in Hollywood’s award season.

    This year, that unstoppable force is Jessie Buckley.

    And she’ll surely be even more unstoppable here given that Baftas voters have given more love overall to her film, Hamnet, than the Oscars did last week.

    The acclaim coming her way is fully deserved – her performance as William Shakespeare’s wife Agnes (aka Anne) is a remarkable portrait of motherhood and grief.

    Also giving fine performances, but probably along for the ride in the best actress category, are Rose Byrne (If I Had Legs I’d Kick You), Emma Stone (Bugonia), Kate Hudson (Song Sung Blue), Renate Reinsve (Sentimental Value) – and Chase Infiniti (One Battle After Another), who receives some justice after being shut out of the Oscar race.

  10. Every nomination for Sinnerspublished at 12:31 GMT 27 January

    Michael B Jordan in Sinners.Image source, Warner Bros.

    Following closely behind One Battle After Another, with 13 nominations, is Ryan Coogler’s period vampire film Sinners.

    It’s up for:

    • Best film
    • Director
    • Original screenplay
    • Leading actor
    • Supporting actress
    • Casting
    • Cinematography
    • Editing
    • Original score
    • Costume design
    • Make-up & hair
    • Production design
    • Sound
  11. Paul Mescal’s nomination makes up for Oscar snubpublished at 12:29 GMT 27 January

    Ian Youngs
    Culture reporter

    Paul Mescal on the Golden Globes red carpetImage source, Reuters

    Paul Mescal was left out of the Oscar nominations for his role as William Shakespeare in Hamnet, but Bafta voters have shown him some love, including him in the best supporting actor race.

    It comes five years after he won his only Bafta, for his breakthrough role in TV’s Normal People.

    The Irish actor will be a pretty long shot to win the award this year, but the race is quite wide open, as well as being very international.

    Mescal faces competition from Australia’s Jacob Elordi (for playing the monster in Frankenstein), Sweden’s Stellan Skarsgård (Sentimental Value), Hollywood star Sean Penn (One Battle After Another), Puerto Rico’s Benicio Del Toro (also One Battle After Another), and there’s a welcome spot for Scottish veteran Peter Mullan (I Swear).

  12. All the nominations for One Battle After Anotherpublished at 12:26 GMT 27 January

    Still from the film One Battle After Another.Image source, Warner Bros.

    As we've just reported, One Battle After Another is leading the Bafta nominees with 14 nominations in total.

    Here’s every award it has been nominated for:

    • Best film
    • Director
    • Adapted screenplay
    • Leading actor
    • Leading actress
    • Supporting actress
    • Supporting actor
    • Supporting actor
    • Casting
    • Cinematography
    • Editing
    • Original score
    • Production design
    • Sound
  13. Record seventh nomination for Leonardo DiCapriopublished at 12:24 GMT 27 January

    Lauren Turner
    Culture reporter

    DiCaprioImage source, Reuters

    With his nomination for leading actor for One Battle After Another, DiCaprio has now received seven in that category in his career - tying the all-time Bafta record.

    And he’s in good company.

    The others to have all received a lucky seven nominations are Michael Caine, Daniel Day-Lewis, Peter Finch, Dustin Hoffman, Jack Lemmon and Laurence Olivier.

  14. Analysis

    A trio of nominations for The Ballad of Wallis Islandpublished at 12:22 GMT 27 January

    Katie Razzall
    Culture editor

    Tim Key, Carey Mulligan and Tom Basden pose in front of a backdrop reading Ballad of Wallis IslandImage source, Getty Images

    The three Bafta nominations, including for outstanding British film, for The Ballad of Wallis Island are richly deserved in my view.

    Carey Mulligan is up for best supporting actress for her role as one half of a long-split folk music duo who are brought back together by a wealthy, Lottery-winning uber-fan played - hilariously, as only he can be - by Tim Key.

    Key and the other star, Tom Basden are also nominated for best adapted screenplay. This is exactly the kind of British comedy drama that should be recognised here in the UK.

    It grew out of a short film, Bafta-nominated in 2008, into a project that was shelved at various times before finally becoming a word-of-mouth hit. An insight into the trials and tribulations that often go into making a movie.

    It pulls an emotional punch. Richard Curtis has even called it “one of the greatest British films of all time” - quite the accolade.

  15. Which films are leading the Bafta film nominations?published at 12:21 GMT 27 January

    We've just heard the Bafta film nominations, here's a look back at which films are leading the pack.

    Leonardo DiCaprio’s thriller One Battle After Another leads the way overall, just ahead of vampire horror Sinners – a reversal of the order when the Oscar nominations were announced last week.

    Hamnet is the top British film, and has performed a bit better than it did with the Oscar voters.

    • One Battle After Another - 14 nominations
    • Sinners – 13
    • Hamnet – 11
    • Marty Supreme – 11
    • Frankenstein – 8
    • Sentimental Value – 8
    Chart showing the 11 films with the most Bafta nominations in 2026, headed by One Battle After Another with 14 nominations represented by 14 gold rings, Sinners with 13, Hamnet and Marty Supreme with 11 each, Frankenstein and Sentimental Value with 8, Bugonia and I Swear with 5, and F1, Pillion and The Ballad of Wallis Island all with 3.
  16. How Hamnet's nominations make historypublished at 12:19 GMT 27 January

    Lauren Turner
    Culture reporter

    Chloé Zhao, centre, stands with Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal on either side of her - she wears a cream dress with cape detail and embroidery of rabbits and ferns - Buckley and Mescal wear dark suit jacketsImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Chloé Zhao, centre, with Hamnet stars Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal

    The film tells a story steeped in history - and now Hamnet has also made it, becoming the most-nominated film by a female director since the Baftas begun.

    Filmmaker Chloé Zhao, who previously won best director at the Baftas and Oscars in 2021 for Nomadland, was at the helm for the film telling the story of Shakespeare’s wife Agnes and how grief transformed both of their lives.

    It picks up 11 nominations for the Baftas, including best film, outstanding British film, director, leading actress (Jessie Buckley), supporting actor (Paul Mescal) and supporting actress (Emily Watson).

    If there was an award for film most likely to make us cry, we’re pretty sure it would have picked up a nomination for that too.

  17. One Battle After Another leads Bafta film nominationspublished at 12:16 GMT 27 January
    Breaking

    Leonardo DiCaprio.Image source, Warner Bros

    One Battle After Another leads the pack with 14 Bafta Film Award nominations.

    Sinners - which made history with 16 Oscar nominations - follows closely behind with 13 nominations.

    We'll bring you a full breakdown shortly.

  18. The nominees for best British filmpublished at 12:13 GMT 27 January

    These 10 films are nominated in the outstanding British film category:

    • 28 Years Later
    • The Ballad Of Wallis Island
    • Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy
    • Die My Love
    • H Is For Hawk
    • Hamnet
    • I Swear
    • Mr Burton
    • Pillion
    • Steve
  19. The best film nomineespublished at 12:13 GMT 27 January
    Breaking

    A still from the film Hamnet, Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley in the woods.Image source, HamnetUniversal

    The five nominees in the best film category are:

    • Hamnet
    • Marty Supreme
    • One Battle After Another
    • Sentimental Value
    • Sinners
  20. The nominations for best directorpublished at 12:12 GMT 27 January

    Nominated for the best director prize, we have:

    • Yorgos Lanthimos; Bugonia
    • Chloé Zhao; Hamnet
    • Josh Safdie; Marty Supreme
    • Paul Thomas Anderson; One Battle After Another
    • Joachim Trier; Sentimental Value
    • Ryan Coogler; Sinners