Moving Images Awards
Script error: No such module "Draft topics".
Script error: No such module "AfC topic".
The Moving Image Awards are awards for artistic achievement for students aged 14-19 taking WJEC qualifications in Media and Film,[1] It was designed in partnership with BFI to recognise and reward "the UK's most talented young film-makers", the awards have been given out annually since 2014 and are assessed by panel of Judges picked by WJEC with each submission being sent in by the student via DVD.[2]
The awards were originally separated into 5 categories: Best Short Film, Best Film Sequence, Best Music Video, 16 and Under and Best Overall, Best TV Extract and Best Screenplay were added in later years with TV and Film Extract being merged into Best Film or TV Extract in 2019.
History[edit]
The first show was held in 2014 at BFI Southbank, London, the event bolstered former BBC radio presenter Iyare Igiehon and British filmmaker Joe Cornish who discussed his film, Attack the Block.
Because of COVID-19, the 2020 awards show had to be streamed digitally via YouTube.
Winners by Year and Category[edit]
Category | Production Name | Winner's Name | Winner's School | Overall Winner? |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 Awards[3] | ||||
Best Short Film | Two Centimetres Apart | Isabella D’Anzi, Poppy Templeton, Louis Barrett | Hove and Sussex Sixth Form College | ✓ |
Best Film Sequence | Erebus: The Rise | Isaac Tendler, George Rees-Jones | Bilborough College | |
Best Music Video | Madeon - Pop Culture | Ben Porro | Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School | |
Best 16 or Under | Death Ball | Sam Allen, Charlie Budden, Stuart McHale | Tanglin Trust School | |
2015 Awards[4] | ||||
Best Short Film | Just Some Morning Tea | George Summers | Truro College | |
Best TV Extract | Sheffield for Intuition | Richard Grimshaw | Penistone Grammar School ALC | |
Best Film Sequence | Turning Tables | Rebecca Staniforth | Wales High School | |
Best Music Video | The Ellipsis - Wasted Potential Me | Matthew Sedgley | King Edward VI College | ✓ |
Best 16 or Under | Frensham | Arianne Lopez Wyld | Weydon School | |
2016 Awards[5] | ||||
Best Short Film | Cloud | James Harvey | The Sixth Form College, Farnborough | ✓ |
Best TV Extract | Deadline | Charley Gaidoni | Hitchin Girls' School | |
Best Film Sequence | Remember Remember | Francis Cousins, James Hastings | The Sixth Form College, Farnborough | |
Best Music Video | Tame Impala - Elephant | Chloe Falcon | St David's Catholic Sixth Form College | |
Best 16 or Under | Paper People | Jack Brazil | Finham Park School | |
2017 Awards[6] | ||||
Best Short Film | The Last Reel | Elliot Collier | Newcastle-Under-Lyme College | ✓ |
Best TV Extract | Everybody Loves Lauren | Georgia Sullivan | Farnborough | |
Best Film Sequence | Scarlet's Vow | Ella Simpson | Sheffield | |
Best Music Video | Us Against Them | Keisha Walters, Lauren Taylor | London | |
Best Screenplay | Hydro | Elijah Stratford | Grimsby | |
2018 Awards[7] | ||||
Best Short Film | 8 | Charlotte Eglinton | Ashbourne Sixth Form College | ✓ |
Best TV Extract | The Real Slim Lady | Liam Blackwell | Wales High School | |
Best Film Sequence | Silva | Sebastian Wright | Cotham School | |
Best Music Video | Serial Killer | Rhiannon Lewis-Brooke, Cerys Glynn Ramsden,
Oben Atamturk |
Stoke Newington School | |
Best Screenplay | The Bell Ringer | Marshall Coltart | Holgate Academy | |
Best 16 or Under | Removed | Isabel Clennell, Niamh Cutler | Finham Park | |
2019 Awards[8] | ||||
Best Short Film | Heads or Tails | Imogen Waite | Heworth Grange School | |
Best Film/TV Extract | The Ice Knife | Jasmine Nugent | Wales High School | ✓ |
Best Music Video | The Great Escape | Callum Broomhead | Saffron Walden County High School | |
Best Screenplay | Lost in Fantasy | Britany Smith | The Holgate Academy | |
2020 Awards[9] | ||||
Best Short Film | Continuum | Antony Popov | Ashbourne College | |
Best Film/TV Extract | Lift-off | Max Roach | Havering Sixth Form College | ✓ |
Best Music Video | Caravan Palace - Supersonics | Oliver Freelove | Myton School | |
Best Screenplay | The Life of Death | Scarlett Balaguero | Bilborough College | |
Best 16 or Under | The Interview | Lola Cronin | Ashlyns School |
References[edit]
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ABOUT US". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ENTER THE COMPETITION". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ABOUT US". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ABOUT US". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ABOUT US". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ABOUT US". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ABOUT US". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ABOUT US". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
- ↑ "Moving Image Award Website - ABOUT US". www.movingimageawards.co.uk. Retrieved 2021-12-28.
This article "Moving Images Awards" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Moving Images Awards. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.