27th Goya Awards

27th Goya Awards
Date February 17, 2013
Site Centro de Convenciones y Congresos Príncipe Felipe, Madrid
Host Eva Hache
Highlights
Best Film Blancanieves
Best Actor José Sacristán
The Dead Man and Being Happy
Best Actress Maribel Verdú
Blancanieves
Most awards Blancanieves (10)
Most nominations Blancanieves (18)
Television coverage
Network TVE
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The 27th Goya Awards were presented at the Centro de Convenciones y Congresos Príncipe Felipe in Madrid on February 17, 2013 to honour the best in Spanish films of 2012. Comedian Eva Hache was the master of ceremonies for the second year in a row. Nominees were announced on January 8, 2013.[1] Blancanieves won ten awards, including Best Film, Best Actress and Best Original Screenplay.

Winners and nominees

Major awards

style="width="50%" | Best Film style="width="50%" | Best Director
style="width="50%" | Best Actor style="width="50%" | Best Actress
style="width="50%" | Best Supporting Actor style="width="50%" | Best Supporting Actress
style="width="50%" | Best New Actor style="width="50%" | Best New Actress
style="width="50%" | Best Original Screenplay style="width="50%" | Best Adapted Screenplay
style="width="50%" | Best Spanish Language Foreign Film style="width="50%" | Best European Film
style="width="50%" | Best New Director style="width="50%" | Best Animated Film
  • Enrique Gato – Tad, The Lost Explorer
    • Paco LeónCarmina or Blow Up
    • Oriol Paulo – The Body
    • Isabel de Ocampo – Evelyn
  • Tad, The Lost Explorer
    • El Corazón del Roble
    • O Apóstolo
    • The Wish Fish

Other award nominees

style="width="50%" | Best Cinematography style="width="50%" | Best Editing
style="width="50%" | Best Art Direction style="width="50%" | Best Production Supervision
style="width="50%" | Best Sound style="width="50%" | Best Special Effects
  • The Impossible – Peter Glossop, Marc Orts and Oriol Tarragó
    • Invasor – Sergio Burmann, Nicolás de Poulpiquet and James Muñoz
    • The Artist and the Model – Pierre Gamet, Nacho Royo-Villanova and Eduardo García Castro
    • Unit 7 – Daniel de Zayas Ramírez, Nacho Royo-Villanova and Pelayo Gutiérrez
  • The Impossible – Pau Costa and Félix Bergés
    • Blancanieves – Reyes Abades and Ferrán Piquer
    • Invasor – Reyes Abades and Isidro Jiménez
    • Unit 7 – Juan Ventura
style="width="50%" | Best Costume Design style="width="50%" | Best Makeup and Hairstyles
style="width="50%" | Best Original Score style="width="50%" | Best Original Song
  • Blancanieves – Alfonso de Villalonga
    • Unit 7 – Julio de la Rosa
    • The Adventures of Tadeo Jones - Álex Martínez and Zacarías M. de la Riva
    • The Impossible – Fernando Velázquez
  • '"No Te Puedo Encontrar"' by Pablo Berger and Juan Gómez "Chicuelo" – Blancanieves
    • "Líneas Paralelas" by Víctor M. Peinado, Pablo Cervantes Gutiérrez and Pablo José Fernández Brenes – Els Nens Salvatges
    • "L'as Tu Vue?" by Alfonso Albacete and Juan Bardem Aguado – La Bande à Picasso
    • "Te Voy A Esperar" by Juan MagánTad, The Lost Explorer
style="width="50%" | Best Fictional Short Film style="width="50%" | Best Animated Short Film
  • Aquel No Era Yo
    • La Boda
    • Ojos Que No Ven
    • Voice Over
  • El Vendedor de Humo
    • Alfred y Anna
    • La Mano de Nefertiti
    • ¿Por Qué Desaparecieron Los Dinosaurios?
style="width="50%" | Best Documentary Film style="width="50%" | Best Documentary Short Film
  • Hijos de Las Nubes, La última Colonia
    • Contra el Tiempo
    • Los Mundos Sutiles
    • Mapa
  • A Story for the Modlins
    • El Violinista de Auschwitz
    • Las Viudas de Ifni
    • Un Cineasta en La Codorniz

Honorary Goya

References

  1. Rolfe, Pamela (2012-12-19). "Spain's Goya Awards to Be Held Feb. 17". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2012-12-19.

External links