2003 Australian Film Institute Awards Explained

2003 Australian Film Institute Awards
Award:Australian Film Institute Awards
Date:21 November 2003
Site:Her Majesty's Theatre, Melbourne
Host:Tony Squires
Director:Felicity Cockram
Best Film:Japanese Story
Best Direction:Sue Brooks
Best Direction Film:Japanese Story
Best Actor:David Wenham
Best Actor Film:Gettin' Square
Best Actress:Toni Collette
Best Actress Film:Japanese Story
Supporting Actor:David Ngoombujarra
Supporting Actor Film:Black and White
Supporting Actress:Sacha Horler
Supporting Actress Film:Travelling Light
Most Wins:Feature film: Japanese Story (8)
Most Nominations:Feature film: Gettin' Square (14)
Television: After the Deluge (8)
Network:ABC
Last:2002
Last Link:2003 Australian Film Institute Awards
Next:2004
Next Link:2005 Australian Film Institute Awards

The 45th Annual Australian Film Institute Awards (generally known as the AFI Awards) were a series of awards presented by the Australian Film Institute (AFI). The awards celebrated the best in Australian feature film, television, documentary, and short film productions of 2003. The event was held at Her Majesty's Theatre, Melbourne, on 21 November 2003, and was hosted by Tony Squires. Stars presenting the awards included Geoffrey Rush, George Miller, Toni Collette, and Jason Donovan.[1] [2]

Winners and nominees

The nominations were announced on 31 October 2003. Leading the feature film nominees was comedy crime caper Gettin' Square with a total of fourteen nominations across 12 of the 14 categories, equalling the record set by director Phillip Noyce's film Newsfront in 1978. After the Deluge, a miniseries about a father who is suffering from Alzheimer's and his three estranged sons who reluctantly come together to secure institutional care for him, gained the most television nominations with eight.[3] [4]

Despite the record number of nominations, Gettin' Square only won a single award, for David Wenham as best actor. Director, Sue Brooks's Japanese Story, about an Australian geologist and a Japanese businessman journeying into the Pilbara desert in Western Australia received eight awards, the most for any production. In the television category, the miniseries After The Deluge and medical-legal drama MDA, won three awards apiece.[5] [6] [7] [8]

Controversies

There was some controversy at the ceremony, with almost half of the winners using their acceptance speeches to criticise the Australian government's proposal to cut cultural subsidies as part of a free trade agreement with the United States. Many arrived wearing yellow and green ribbons in protest against the agreement.

Feature Film

Best FilmBest Direction
Best Original ScreenplayBest Adapted Screenplay
Best Lead ActorBest Lead Actress
Best Supporting ActorBest Supporting Actress
Best CinematographyBest Editing
Best Original Music ScoreBest Sound
Best Production DesignBest Costume Design

Television

! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Drama Series! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Comedy Series

Series 2 (ABC) – Denny Lawrence

Series 2 (ABC) – John Eastway

Series 6 (Nine Network) – John Wilde, Roger Le Mesurier and Roger Simpson

Series 3 (Network Ten) – Amanda Higgs

Series 2 (ABC) – Gina Riley, Jane Turner and Mark Ruse

! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Telefeature or Mini Series! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Light Entertainment Series

Series 6 (ABC) – Damian Davis and Nick Price

Season 3 (ABC) – Ted Robinson

! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Lead Actor! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Lead Actress
! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Guest or Supporting Actor! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Guest or Supporting Actress
! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Direction! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Screenplay
! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"Best Children's Television Drama! style="background:#dbd090; width=;"50%"

Non-feature film

Best DocumentaryBest Direction in a Documentary
  • Wildness – Michael McMahon
    • Painting with Light in a Dark World – Renata Schuman and Ellenor Cox
    • Silent StormPeter Butt and Rob McAuely
    • The Original Mermaid – Ian Collie
  • Sascha Ettinger-Epstein – Painting with Light in a Dark World
Best Short Fiction FilmBest Short Animation
  • Harvie KrumpetAdam Elliot
    • Cane Toad: What Happened To Baz? – David Clayton and Andrew Silke
    • Hello – Jonathan Nix
    • Mother Tongue – Susan Kim
Best Screenplay in a Short FilmBest Cinematography in a Non-Feature Film
  • Glendyn Ivin – Cracker Bag
    • Steven McGregorCold Turkey
    • Sofya Gollan – Preservation
    • Scott Pickett – The Rouseabout
Best Editing in a Non-Feature FilmBest Sound in a Non-Feature Film
  • Rolland Gallois and Andrew Aristides – Painting with Light in a Dark World
    • Jack Hutchings – Cracker Bag
    • Geoff Hitchins – Roy Höllsdotter Live
    • Sally Fryer – The Original Mermaid
  • Jonathan Nix – Hello
    • Julian Ellingworth – Silent Storm
    • Doran Kipen, Mark Street and Cameron Davies – The Navigators: Baudin vs Flinders
    • Paul Charlier and Ian McLoughlin – The Projectionist

Additional Awards

Young Actor's AwardBest Foreign Film
Open Craft AFI Award TelevisionOpen Craft AFI Award Non Feature Film
  • The Brotherhood – Terry Carlyon (for Excellence in Research and Innovative Storytelling)
    • Cold TurkeyJohn Moore (for Acting)
    • Love Letters From a War – Wain Fimeri (for Dramatisation)
    • Preservation – Margot Wilson and Elizabeth Mary Moore (for Production and Costume Design)

Individual Awards

AwardWinner
Byron Kennedy AwardDion Beebe
Raymond Longford Award
Global Achievement AwardGeoffrey Rush
AFI Screenwriting PrizeAlison Tilson

Multiple nominations

The following films received multiple nominations.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2003-11-22 . Japanese Story scoops AFIs . 2024-01-14 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  2. Web site: 2003-11-20 . Red carpet blues . 2024-01-14 . The Age . en.
  3. News: 2003-10-31 . At the AFIs, it's hip to be Gettin' Square . 2024-01-14 . ABC News . en-AU.
  4. Web site: 2003-10-31 . Crime comedy equals AFI record . 2024-01-14 . The Age . en.
  5. Web site: Winners & Nominees . 2024-01-14 . www.aacta.org . en-AU.
  6. News: 2003-11-21 . 'Japanese Story' scoops AFIs . 2024-01-14 . ABC News . en-AU.
  7. Web site: 2003-11-22 . AFI Award winners' list . 2024-01-14 . The Sydney Morning Herald . en.
  8. News: 2003-11-24 . Japanese Story sweeps board at Aussie awards . 2024-01-14 . The Guardian . en-GB . 0261-3077.