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Sunday 13 February
Photos from the Film Awards ceremony in 2011.
Tim Corrie makes his opening address at the top of the show. (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)
The stars of Brit film StreetDance 3D opened the show with a dazzling performance (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Sir Paul McCartney presented the Original Music BAFTA and joked "If I find my music is being used in a movie, I personally ring up the director to let him know how much I’m suing him for.” (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)
"We were lucky to find in the archives the microphones that belonged to George VI, and to the royal family. Just for that, I could do it again." Alexandre Desplat (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)
"I won the BAFTA for my short film [Dog Altogether] three years ago and it spurred me on to complete my first film [Tyrannosaur], so the importance of these awards is not to be underestimated." Paddy Considine (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)
Paul Wright and Poss Kondeatis won for their short Until The River Runs Red. Wright thanked the cast and crew: "We were small in numbers, but big in effort and passion." (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)
Michael Please accepts the BAFTA for his animation The Eagleman Stag. (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)
Max Irons (Red Riding Hood) and Felicity Jones (Cemetery Junction) present the BAFTAs for Sound and Editing. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Richard King and Ed Novack picked up the BAFTA for their sterling work on sci-fi blockbuster Inception. (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)
True Grit star and Leading Actress nominee Hailee Steinfeld announces the Make Up & Hair winner. (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)
Valli O'Reilly and Paul Gooch pick up the BAFTA for their distinctive work in Alice In Wonderland. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
"These are films that can be understood by anyone, but which Hollywood will still feel the need to remake in English." Film critic Mark Kermode (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo producer Søren Stærmose and director Niels Arden Oplev (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Dev Patel (Slumdog Millionaire) and Talulah Riley (St Trinian's) announce the Costume Design winner. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Colleen Atwood accepts the BAFTA for her work on Alice In Wonderland. "He is such a great artist and really respects that process for all of us," she said of director Tim Burton. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Sam Claflin (Pirates Of The Caribbean: On Stranger Tides) and Minnie Driver (Barney's Version) announce the Production Design winner. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Guy Hendrix Dyas, Larry Dias and Doug Mowat take the BAFTA for their exceptional work on Inception. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Jesse Eisenberg (The Social Network) and Jennifer Lawrence (Winter's Bone) announce the Special Visual Effects winner. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Chris Corbould, Paul Franklin, Andrew Lockley and Peter Bebb took the BAFTA for their dazzling effects work on Inception. "I feel like I'm about to be dunked into a cold bath and woken up and told I still have to finish the film," said Franklin. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Past BAFTA nominee James McAvoy (Atonement, The Last King Of Scotland) announces the Supporting Actress winner. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Helena Bonham Carter accepts the BAFTA for her role in The King's Speech. "I am thrilled to be considered in the same category as my fellow supporting actresses, and I am not just sucking up: you are all brilliant." (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
Kevin Spacey, past BAFTA winner for American Beauty, announces the winner of Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director and Producer. (Pic: BAFTA/ Stephen Butler)
"We are obviously not Chris Morris. He didn't tell us what to say if he won, but he did send us a text message about five minutes ago, and they both say the same thing: 'Doused in petrol, Zippo at the ready.'" Four Lions stars Nigel Lindsay and Adeel Akhtar accept writer/director Chris Morris' BAFTA on his behalf. (Pic: BAFTA/Stephen Butler)