Goya Award for Best Adapted Screenplay

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Native namePremio Goya al mejor guión adaptado
Awarded forBest adapted screenplay in a Spanish film of the year
CountrySpain
Goya Awards for Best Adapted Screenplay
The 2026 recipients (along with Yolanda García Serrano): Manuel Gómez Pereira and Joaquín Oristrell
Native namePremio Goya al mejor guión adaptado
Awarded forBest adapted screenplay in a Spanish film of the year
CountrySpain
Presented byAcademy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain (AACCE)
First award1st Goya Awards (1986)
Most recent winnerJoaquín Oristrell, Manuel Gómez Pereira, Yolanda García Serrano
The Dinner (2025)
WebsiteOfficial website

The Goya Award for Best Adapted Screenplay (Spanish: Premio Goya al mejor guión adaptado) is one of the Goya Awards presented annually by the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain (AACCE).

For the first two editions of the Goya Awards, only one award for screenplays was presented which included both original and adapted screenplays, with both winners being adaptations, Voyage to Nowhere in 1986 (based on the novel of the same name by Fernando Fernán Gómez) and El Bosque animado (based on the eponymous novel by Wenceslao Fernández Flórez) in 1987. Since the third edition, two awards are presented separately, Best Original Screenplay and Best Adapted Screenplay.

Rafael Azcona has received this award four times, more than any other nominee, winning for ¡Ay Carmela! (1990) with Carlos Saura, Banderas, the Tyrant (1993) with José Luis García Sánchez, Butterfly's Tongue (1999) with Manuel Rivas and José Luis Cuerda and The Blind Sunflowers (2008) with José Luis Cuerda.

1980s

References

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