BAFTA Award for Best Editing

BAFTA Award for Best Editing
Awarded forBest Editing
LocationUnited Kingdom
Presented byBritish Academy of Film and Television Arts
Currently held byJennifer Lame for Oppenheimer (2023)
Websitehttps://www.bafta.org

Best Editing is a British Academy Film Award presented annually by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) to recognize a film editor who has delivered outstanding editing in a film.

The British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA), is a British organisation that hosts annual awards shows for film, television, children's film and television, and interactive media. Since 1966, selected editors have been awarded with the BAFTA award for Best Editing at an annual ceremony. Traditionally, four films have been nominated each year until 2000, when the Academy expanded the annual number of nominees to five. Only twice the predetermined limit was exceeded: in 1992, when, due to a tie in the vote, there were five nominees, and in 2008, when there were six nominees.

In the following lists, the titles and names in bold with a gold background are the winners and recipients respectively; those not in bold are the nominees. The years given are those in which the films under consideration were released, not the year of the ceremony, which always takes place the following year.

The film-voting members of the Academy select the five nominated films in each category; only the principal editor(s) for each film are named, which excludes additional editors, supervising editors, etc.[1][2] The actual winner of Best Editing is selected by "Chapter Voting"; only Academy members who are identified as members of the Editing Chapter vote on the winner.

  1. ^ "Orange British Academy Film Awards: Rules and Guidelines 2008 – 2009" (PDF). British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 28, 2011. Retrieved January 9, 2009.
  2. ^ The nominees in each award category are determined by two rounds of voting. In the first round, each member is given a list of all eligible films, and votes for twelve films in each category of the awards. Up to fifteen films that received the largest number of votes in each category are on the second round ballot. The five films in each category receiving the largest number of second round votes become the nominees.