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Barfta Awards 2015: Nicole Kidman wins worst actress for 'Dis-Grace of Monaco'

Britain's answer to the Golden Raspberries takes aim at film dubbed 'Dis-Grace of Monaco'

Nick Clark
Sunday 15 February 2015 01:00 GMT
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Nicole Kidman was named worst actress for her performance as Grace Kelly in Grace of Monaco
Nicole Kidman was named worst actress for her performance as Grace Kelly in Grace of Monaco

Many dream of growing up to become a princess but the acting community may stay well away from royal roles in the future. For the second year in a row, the worst actress award at Britain’s answer to the Golden Raspberries has gone to a star playing real-life royalty.

Nicole Kidman was today named worst actress for her performance as Grace Kelly at the Barfta Awards, which honours the most egregious works to hit the cinemas over the past year.

Each year the British Academy for Rubbish Films and Terrible Acting commemorates the worst films and performances of the year, and according to the organisers “2015 has proved a vintage year for terrible films”.

Just as the Golden Raspberries were set up to counter the Oscars, the Barftas counter the glitzy Bafta awards ceremony which played out last Sunday. The public face of the UK awards is showbiz website Popbitch.

Grace of Monaco, about the American actress’s marriage to Prince Rainier III, was met with laughter in the auditorium and eviscerated by the critics when it opened last year’s Cannes Film Festival.

Simon Pegg was named worst actor for his performance in ‘Hector and the Search for Happiness’

The Barfta judges took aim at a film – dubbed “Dis-Grace of Monaco” – where “a plucky woman fights to stop the super-rich having to pay their taxes. We almost miss Diana.”

Last year, the biopic of Princess Diana swept the boards, winning worst film and worst actor for Naomi Watts in the lead role in what the organisers called a “misfire of biblical proportions”. Other recent royal flops include Madonna’s W.E., about Wallis Simpson and the abdication of Edward VIII.

Worst British film went to Pudsey the Dog: the Movie, which the judges described as a “train wreck,” adding: “It’s a film about a dog that danced on a TV show. God help us all.” David Walliams was shortlisted for worst actor for voicing the dog.

Yet he was beaten by Simon Pegg, who starred in the “frankly creepy” Hector and the Search for Happiness. One voter described the Shaun of the Dead star as “the most puncheable lead in film history”.

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This year Cameron Diaz pulled off an extraordinary double. She was nominated for worst actress in Sex Tape – which made the judges “want to pour bleach in our eyes. And our ears” – and for worst supporting actress for her turn in Annie. That remake won worst US film for being so sickly sweet “watching it may well induce type two diabetes”.

'Pudsey the Dog: The movie' was described as a “train wreck” by judges

Special prizes included the Dick van Dyke award for calamitous accent awarded to Russell Crowe for his “frankly baffling accent in the frankly baffling” A New York Winter’s Tale. The Fifa movie United Passions was also singled out for particular opprobrium.

Camilla Wright, founder of Popbitch, said the list of movies was so terrible that it makes “waterboarding seem like an attractive alternative”

The Barfta voting academy is made up of notable British film critics and industry professionals who vote anonymously. Popbitch has fronted the awards since they were set up in 2013.

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