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    ‘Pillion’ Dominates BIFA Awards, ‘Sentimental Value’ Wins Best International Film

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    ‘Pillion’ Dominates BIFA Awards, ‘Sentimental Value’ Wins Best International Film


    Writer-director Harry Lighton‘s feature debut Pillion, a sub/dom romance starring Alexander Skarsgård as a leather-clad biker and Harry Melling as a suburban Londoner who starts a relationship with him and becomes his submissive, won four British Independent Film Awards (BIFAs) statuettes, including two for best independent British film and best debut screenwriter in London on Sunday. Celia Imrie presented the best film award at the end of an evening full of love and appreciation for indie film.

    Including the recently unveiled BIFA craft awards, Pillion ended up with a total of four BIFA wins, the same number as Ray Mendoza and Alex Garland’s Navy SEALs platoon movie Warfare earned in the previously unveiled craft and ensemble cast categories.

    Myrid Carten’s exploration of mental health and addiction within her family, A Want in Her, was honored with three BIFAs on Sunday, namely for best feature documentary, the best debut director – feature documentary, and The Raindance Maverick Award.  

    Early in the evening, Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value was honored with the best international indie film BIFA.

    Akinola Davies Jr. won the best director honor for his Lagos, Nigeria-set debut feature My Father’s Shadow, a family drama starring Sopé Dirisu (Slow Horses). The film, the U.K. submission for the best international feature film race at the Oscars, had led the BIFA nominations with 12. Handing Davies his statuette was Billy Crudup.

    Meanwhile, Tom Basden and Tim Key won BIFAs for the best joint lead performance, as well as best screenplay for their debut feature The Ballad of Wallis Island, about a faded folk musician and his former partner reluctantly reuniting for an eccentric fan.

    The BIFA acting trophies went to Robert Aramayo, who received the best lead performance award for his role as a Tourette’s campaigner in Kirk Jones’ I Swear, Posy Sterling for her best breakthrough performance-honored role as a mother fighting for the custody of her children in Daisy-May Hudson’s debut feature Lollipop, and Jay Lycurgo for his best supporting performance-winning role in pressure-cooker school drama Steve, also starring Cillian Murphy.

    The Douglas Hickox Award for best debut director went to Cal McMau for his prison drama Wasteman, tracing the tense bond between two men whose lives collide behind bars. The movie stars David Jonsson and Tom Blyth. And the breakthrough producer honor was bestowed upon Dhiraj Mahey for his work on the social-realist coming-of-age drama Ish, which was also produced by Bennett McGhee.  

    The best British short film award went to Magid / Zafar, a dissection of the relationship between two men amid rising tensions in a British-Pakistani takeaway restaurant from director Luís Hindman. 

    A special jury prize went to Adolescence producer
    and This Is England producer Warp Films.

    During his acceptance speech, Lighton recalled being nominated for a BIFA with a short film in 2017. “I didn’t win, and I got incredibly drunk and spent the rest of the evening kind of burning industry bridges. I’m going to start by saying thank you to BIFA for not blacklisting me,” he quipped.

    He thanked a range of collaborators, including the film’s stars, “Harry and Alex. What a hot couple!” Concluded Lighton: “I remember it kind of blew my mind that I sent both of you a script about butt plugs, and you both said yes.”

    In another highlight of Sunday evening, the 2025 Richard Harris Award for Outstanding Contribution by an Actor to British Film was handed to Emily Watson by her two-time co-star and friend Paul Mescal.   

    Watson, during her acceptance speech, addressed the audience as “you lot – independent, creative critical thinkers. You are actually going to save us when the stories that are being told to us, about us, or by us, are all driven by a rapacious, hungry algorithm. The awkward truth of the stories that you tell, they are our life support.”

    Later in her speech, Watson said: “So what you have to do is you have to reach out to those coming behind you, and you have to build relationships with younger colleagues, less certain of their path than you are. And that is actually the most rewarding part of the job, and it will ensure that we can help keep holding the algorithm to the fire.”

    Check out the full list of winners at the British Independent Film Awards 2025 below.

    Best British Independent Film
    Pillion

    Best British Short Film
    Magid / Zafar

    Best Casting
    Lauren Evans, I Swear

    Best Cinematography
    Seamus McGarvey, Die My Love

    Best Costume Design
    Grace Snell, Pillion

    Best Debut Screenwriter
    Harry Lighton, Pillion

    Best Debut Director
    Cal McMau, Wasteman

    Best Debut Director – Feature Documentary
    Myrid Carten, A Want in Her

    Best Director
    Akinola Davies Jr., My Father’s Shadow

    Best Editing
    Fin Oates, Warfare

    Best Effects
    Simon Stanley-Clamp and Ryan Conder, Warfare

    Best Ensemble Performance
    Joseph Quinn, D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Will Poulter, Cosmo Jarvis, Finn Bennett, Charles Melton, and Kit Connor, Warfare

    Best Feature Documentary
    A Want in Her

    Best International Independent Film
    Sentimental Value

    Best Joint Lead
    Tom Basden and Tim Key, The Ballad of Wallis Island

    Best Lead Performance
    Robert Aramayo, I Swear

    Best Breakthrough Performance
    Posy Sterling, Lollipop

    Best Breakthrough Producer
    Dhiraj Mahey, Ish

    Best Make-Up and Hair Design
    Diandra Ferreira, Pillion

    Best Music Supervision
    Raife Burchell and Ian Neil, Die My Love

    Best Original Music
    Tom Basden and Adem Ilhan, The Ballad of Wallis Island

    Best Production Design
    Nathan Parker, Harvest

    Best Screenplay
    Tom Basden and Tim Key, The Ballad of Wallis Island

    Best Sound
    Glenn Freemantle, Mitch Low, Howard Bargroff, Ben Barker and Richard Spooner, Warfare

    Best Supporting Performance
    Jay Lycurgo, Steve

    The Raindance Maverick Award
    Myrid Carten, A Want in Her

    Special Jury Prize
    Warp Films

    BIFA Cinema of the Year Award
    The Magic Lantern Cinema in Tywyn

    Richard Harris Award for Outstanding Contribution by an Actor to British Film
    Emily Watson



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