Never Let Me Go, the movie directed by Mark Romanek and based on the  novel by award-winning author Kazuo Ishiguro, is to open the 54th BFI  London Film Festival (LFF), which takes place 13-28 October.
The  film, already being touted as an Oscar contender, is co-produced by DNA  Films and Film4, and distributed internationally by Fox Searchlight  Pictures. Another Ishiguro book The Remains Of The Day was also the  subject of the 1993 Oscar-nominated movie.
The awards theme continues as the LFF announces plans to host its first ever awards ceremony on 28 October.
Among  the accolades handed out will be the Best British Newcomer Award, which  rewards new and emerging UK film talent and recognises the  accomplishments of a new writer, producer or director in his or her  first feature at the festival.
Other honours include  the Best Film, a new award celebrating "creative, original, imaginative,  intelligent and distinctive" filmmaking.
And the  festival's most revered tribute is the long-established British Film  Institute Fellowship, which goes to individual actors or directors in  recognition of their outstanding contribution to film or television.  Previous winners include Hollywood legend Bette Davis, Martin Scorsese,  Bernardo Bertolucci, Robert Altman, and Dame Maggie Smith.
Photography by Agnieszka Zychska
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