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7th AACTA Awards

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7th AACTA Awards
Date4 December 2017 (industry luncheon) and
6 December 2017 (main ceremony)
SiteThe Star Event Centre
Sydney
Highlights
Best FilmLion
Most awardsLion (12)
Most nominationsLion (12)
Television coverage
NetworkSeven Network
Ratings309,000[1]

The 7th Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts Awards (generally known as the AACTA Awards) are a series of Australian film and television awards. Presented by the Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA), the awards celebrate the best in Australian feature film, television, documentary and short film productions of 2017. A record number of thirty five feature films were submitted for competition.[2] The main ceremony was held on 6 December 2017.

Recipients and nominations

[3] [4]

Feature film

  • Robert Mackenzie, Glenn Newnham, Nakul Kamte, Andrew Ramage, James Ashton, Mario Vaccaro – Lion
    • Liam Egan, Trevor Hope, Robert Sullivan, Yulia Akerholt, James Andrews, Les Fiddess – Jasper Jones
    • Serge Lacroix, Cate Cahill, Francis Byrne – The Killing Ground
    • Wayne Pashley, Rick Lisle, Fabian Sanjurgo, Michael Semanick, Gregg Landaker – The LEGO® Batman Movie

Television

  • Top of the Lake: China Girl (Foxtel/BBC First) – Emile Sherman, Iain Canning, Jane Campion, Philippa Campbell, Libby Sharpe
    • Cleverman (ABC) – Rosemary Blight, Sharon Lark, Ryan Griffen, Jane Allen
    • Glitch (ABC) – Louise Fox, Tony Ayres, Julie Eckersley, Chris Oliver-Taylor
    • Janet King – Playing Advantage (ABC) – Lisa Scott, Karl Zwicky, Greg Haddrick
    • Wentworth (Foxtel/Showcase) – Jo Porter, Pino Amenta
  • Utopia (ABC) – Santo Cilauro, Tom Gleisner, Rob Sitch, Michael Hirsh
  • Australian Ninja Warrior (Nine Network) – Julie Ward, Mark Barlin, Sophia Mogford
    • Gruen (ABC) – Wil Anderson, Nick Murray, Richard Huddleston, Polly Connolly
    • Hard Quiz (ABC) – Chris Walker, Kevin Whyte, Charlie Pickering, Tom Gleeson
    • Julia Zemiro's Home Delivery (ABC) – Damian Davis, Nick Murray, Polly Connolly, Nick Price

Best Cinematography in Television

Best Editing in Television

Best Sound in Television
  • Stephen Smith, Liam Price, Paul Brincat, Shanti Burn and Tony Murtagh – Wake in Fright (Network Ten) for Episode 1: "Part 1"
    • Tim Chaproniere, Emile De La Ray, Matt Stutter, Paul Brincat, Nigel Scott and Chris Sinclair – Cleverman (ABC) for Episode 3: "Dark Clouds"
    • Luke Mynott, David Lee and Tony Vaccher – Top of the Lake: China Girl (Foxtel/BBC First) for Episode 4: "Birthday"
    • Stephen Witherow, Justin Lloyd, Ian MacWilliams, Dan Young, Nigel Croyden and Stefan Kluka – Seven Types of Ambiguity (ABC) for Episode 1: "Joe"
Best Original Music Score in Television
Best Production Design in Television
Best Costume Design in Television

Documentary and short film

Best Feature Length Documentary
  • Casting JonBenet – Kitty Green, Scott Macaulay, James Schamus
    • David Stratton: A Cinematic Life – Jo-anne McGowan
    • Deep Water: The Real Story – Darren Dale
    • Whiteley – Sue Clothier, James Bogle, Peta Ayers
    • Zach's Ceremony – Sarah Linton, Alec Doomadgee
Best Short Fiction Film Best Short Animation
    • The Eleven O'Clock – Derin Seale, Josh Lawson, Karen Bryson
    • Miro – Victoria Wharfe McIntyre, Fran Dobbie, Amadeo Marquez-Perez
    • Mrs McCutcheonJohn Sheedy, Andre Lima, Jenny Vila
    • Slapper – Luci Schroder, Jason Byrne, Michael Latham, Stephanie Westwood
    • After All – Michael Cusack, Richard Chataway
    • BarbaraLarissa Behrendt, Marieka Walsh, Kiki Dillon, Michaela Perske
    • Lost Property Office – Daniel Agdag, Liz Kearney
    • The Wall – Nick Baker, Tristan Klein

Other

Best Asian Film

References

  1. ^ Tutty, Josie (7 December 2017). "Struggle Street beats Seven's AACTA Awards on Wednesday night". Mumbrella. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
  2. ^ Keast, Jackie (17 August 2017). "AACTA Awards 2017: feature films in competition and doco nominees unveiled". IF Magazine. Retrieved 3 September 2017. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  3. ^ Convery, Stephanie (4 December 2017). "Aacta awards 2017: Lion and Ali's Wedding sweep early categories". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  4. ^ Maddox, Garry (6 December 2017). "AACTA Awards 2017 winners: Lion roared with clean sweep and youngest best actor". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 6 December 2017. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)