Golden Globe awards wide open as 'Atonement' leads nominees
By: DAVID GERMAIN - Associated Press | ∞
MOTION PICTURE CATEGORIES
BEST MOTION PICTURE, DRAMA
-- "American Gangster"
-- "Atonement"
-- "Eastern Promises"
-- "The Great Debaters"
-- "Michael Clayton"
-- "No Country for Old Men"
-- "There Will Be Blood"
BEST MOTION PICTURE, MUSICAL OR COMEDY
-- "Across the Universe"
-- "Charlie Wilson's War"
-- "Hairspray"
-- "Juno"
-- "Sweeney Todd"
FOREIGN LANGUAGE PICTURE
-- "4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days" (Romania)
-- "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" (France/USA)
-- "The Kite Runner" (USA)
-- "Lust, Caution" (Taiwan)
-- "Persepolis" (France)
BEST DIRECTOR
-- Tim Burton, "Sweeney Todd"
-- Joel Coen and Ethan Coen, "No Country for Old Men"
-- Julian Schnabel, "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly"
-- Ridley Scott, "American Gangster"
-- Joe Wright, "Atonement"
BEST DRAMATIC ACTOR
-- George Clooney, "Michael Clayton"
-- Daniel Day-Lewis, "There Will Be Blood"
-- James McAvoy, "Atonement"
-- Viggo Mortensen, "Eastern Promises"
-- Denzel Washington, "American Gangster"
BEST DRAMATIC ACTRESS
-- Cate Blanchett, "Elizabeth: The Golden Age"
-- Julie Christie, "Away From Her"
-- Jodie Foster, "The Brave One"
-- Angelina Jolie, "A Mighty Heart"
-- Keira Knightley, "Atonement"
BEST ACTOR, COMEDY OR MUSICAL
-- Johnny Depp, "Sweeney Todd"
-- Tom Hanks, "Charlie Wilson's War"
-- Ryan Gosling, "Lars and the Real Girl"
-- Philip Seymour Hoffman, "The Savages"
-- John C. Reilly, "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story"
BEST ACTRESS, COMEDY OR MUSICAL
-- Amy Adams, "Enchanted"
-- Nikki Blonsky, "Hairspray"
-- Helena Bonham Carter, "Sweeney Todd"
-- Marion Cotillard, "La Vie en Rose"
-- Ellen Page, "Juno"
SUPPORTING ACTOR
-- Casey Affleck, "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford"
-- Javier Bardem, "No Country for Old Men"
-- Philip Seymour Hoffman, "Charlie Wilson's War"
-- John Travolta, "Hairspray"
-- Tom Wilkinson, "Michael Clayton" SUPPORTING ACTRESS
-- Cate Blanchett, "I'm Not There"
-- Saoirse Ronan, "Atonement"
-- Julia Roberts, "Charlie Wilson's War"
-- Amy Ryan, "Gone Baby Gone"
-- Tilda Swinton, "Michael Clayton"
ANIMATED FILM
-- "Bee Movie"
-- "Ratatouille"
-- "The Simpsons Movie"
SCREENPLAY
-- Diablo Cody, "Juno"
-- Joel Coen and Ethan Coen, "No Country for Old Men"
--Christopher Hampton, "Atonement"
-- Ronald Harwood, "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly"
-- Aaron Sorkin, "Charlie Wilson's War"
ORIGINAL SCORE
-- Dario Marianelli, "Atonement"
-- Howard Shore, "Eastern Promises"
-- Clint Eastwood, "Grace Is Gone"
-- Michael Brook, Kaki King, Eddie Vedder, "Into the Wild"
-- Alberto Iglesias, "The Kite Runner"
SONG
-- "Despedida" from "Love in the Time of Cholera"
-- "Grace Is Gone" from "Grace Is Gone"
-- "Guaranteed" from "Into the Wild"
-- "That's How You Know" from "Enchanted"
-- "Walk Hard" from "Walk Hard"
TELEVISION CATEGORIES
DRAMATIC TV SERIES
-- "Big Love"
-- "Damages"
-- "Grey's Anatomy"
-- "House"
-- "Mad Men"
-- "The Tudors"
BEST ACTOR, TV DRAMA
-- Michael C. Hall, "Dexter"
-- John Hamm, "Mad Men"
-- Hugh Laurie, "House"
-- Jonathan Rhys Meyers, "The Tudors"
-- Bill Paxton, "Big Love"
BEST ACTRESS, TV DRAMA
-- Patricia Arquette, "Medium"
-- Glenn Close, "Damages"
-- Minnie Driver, "The Riches"
-- Edie Falco, "The Sopranos"
-- Sally Field, "Brothers and Sisters"
-- Holly Hunter, "Saving Grace"
-- Kyra Sedgwick, "The Closer"
TV SERIES, MUSICAL OR COMEDY
-- "Californication"
-- "Entourage"
-- "Extras"
-- "30 Rock"
-- "Pushing Daisies"
BEST ACTOR, TV MUSICAL OR COMEDY
-- Alec Baldwin, "30 Rock"
-- Steve Carell, "The Office"
-- David Duchovny, "Californication"
-- Ricky Gervais, "Extras"
-- Lee Pace, "Pushing Daisies"
BEST ACTRESS, TV MUSICAL OR COMEDY
-- Christina Applegate, "Samantha Who?"
-- America Ferrera, "Ugly Betty"
-- Tina Fey, "30 Rock"
-- Anna Friel, "Pushing Daisies"
-- Mary-Louise Parker, "Weeds"
BEST MINI-SERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
--"Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee"
-- "The Company"
-- "5 Days"
-- "The State Within"
-- "Longford"
BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MINISERIES OR A MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
-- Bryce Dallas Howard, "As You Like It"
-- Debra Messing, "The Starter Wife"
-- Queen Latifah, "Life Support"
-- Sissy Spacek, "Pictures of Hollis Woods"
-- Ruth Wilson, "Jane Eyre"
BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MINISERIES OR A MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
-- Adam Beach, "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee"
-- Ernest Borgnine, "A Grandpa for Christmas"
-- Jim Broadbent, "Longford"
-- James Isaacs, "The State Within"
-- James Nesbitt, "Jekyll"
BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A SERIES, MINISERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
-- Rose Byrne, "Damages"
-- Rachel Griffiths, "Brothers and Sisters"
-- Katherine Heigl, "Grey's Anatomy"
-- Samantha Morton, "Longford"
-- Anna Paquin, "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee "
-- Jaime Pressly, "My Name Is Earl"
BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A SERIES, MINISERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
-- Ted Danson, "Damages"
-- Kevin Dillon, "Entourage"
-- Jeremy Piven, "Entourage"
-- Andy Serkis, "Longford"
-- William Shatner, "Boston Legal"
-- Donald Sutherland, "Dirty Sexy Money"
CECIL B. DEMILLE LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
-- Steven Spielberg
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. -- Hollywood awards are so up for grabs that even Golden Globe voters were divided, picking seven nominees for best drama instead of the usual five.
The classy British drama "Atonement" received a leading seven nominations Thursday and joined such savage critical favorites as "No Country for Old Men" and "There Will Be Blood" as potential Academy Awards heavyweights.
All three earned Golden Globe nominations for best drama, though this year's awards pageant is so wide open that voters could not narrow things down to the usual five nominees. Because of a tie in voting, there were seven, the others being the crime sagas "American Gangster" and "Eastern Promises," the feel-good campus story "The Great Debaters" and the corporate-lawsuit drama "Michael Clayton."
Just released last weekend, "Atonement" earned nominations for lead players Keira Knightley and James McAvoy, 13-year-old supporting actress Saoirse Ronan and director Joe Wright, along with screenwriting and musical score.
With so many nominations on "Atonement," the Globes ceremony Jan. 13 will be a true celebration for the cast and crew, said Knightley, a past Globe and Oscar nominee for Wright's 2005 film "Pride & Prejudice."
Knightley already has gotten a head start on the revelry, though.
"I unwittingly just got attacked (last night) by a bottle of Chianti," said Knightley, playing a woman who loses her new lover to false criminal accusations by her jealous younger sister. "But maybe hair of the dog and I'll just carry on with a bit of champagne tonight. I think that's all right."
A three-way tie for the fifth slot resulted in the seven drama nominees, the first time that has happened in the 65-year history of the Globes, said Michael Russell, spokesman for the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which presents the awards.
Oscar nominations come out Jan. 22, nine days after the Globes are presented. Further confounding the crowded Oscar campaign is a strong lineup in the Golden Globes' second best-picture category, for musical or comedy.
The Johnny Depp stage adaptation "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" could become the latest entry in a rebirth of the Hollywood movie musical to earn a best-picture Oscar nomination.
Along with best musical or comedy, "Sweeney Todd" earned acting nominations for Depp as the murderous title character and Helena Bonham Carter as his landlady, who serves the barber's victims up in her meat pies. Tim Burton, Bonham Carter's romantic partner, was nominated for directing "Sweeney Todd."
Expecting their second child, Burton and Bonham Carter got the word about the nominations while at the doctor's office in England, where they live.
"We were sort of in the middle of a chat about inducing the baby. It's meant to come out tomorrow," Bonham Carter said, adding that they might celebrate by spray-painting "my belly, because it looks like a globe."
Along with "Sweeney Todd," two other musicals -- the Beatles romance "Across the Universe" and the Broadway adaptation "Hairspray" -- were nominated in the musical or comedy category, along with the foreign-policy romp "Charlie Wilson's War" and the teen-pregnancy tale "Juno."
The satiric "Charlie Wilson's War" ran second to "Atonement" with five nominations, among them acting honors for Oscar winners Tom Hanks as a congressman, Julia Roberts as a Texas socialite and Philip Seymour Hoffman as a slovenly CIA man who shape U.S. covert reaction to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Past Oscar winners crowded the Globe nominations. Hoffman was a double Globe nominee, also scoring a lead-actor bid for musical or comedy in the sibling tale "The Savages." Cate Blanchett also had two nominations, as dramatic actress for playing the British monarch in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" and supporting actress for her gender-bending role as an incarnation of Bob Dylan in "I'm Not There."
Screenplay Oscar winners Joel and Ethan Coen were nominated for directing and screenwriting on "No Country for Old Men," which scored a supporting-actor nomination for Javier Bardem as a relentless killer.
Other Oscar winners earning Globe nominations included George Clooney in the title role of "Michael Clayton," Julie Christie as a woman with Alzheimer's in "Away From Her," Daniel Day-Lewis as an oil tycoon in "There Will Be Blood," Jodie Foster as a gun-toting vigilante in "The Brave One," Angelina Jolie as journalist Mariane Pearl in "A Mighty Heart" and Denzel Washington as a Harlem drug lord in "American Gangster." Washington also directed best-drama nominee "The Great Debaters."
Fresh faces joined veteran awards nominees, too.
Besides teenager Ronan, who plays the sister who sets the "Atonement" drama in motion, nominees included relative unknowns Amy Ryan as a neglectful mother in "Gone Baby Gone," Nikki Blonsky as a spirited teen in "Hairspray," Marion Cotillard as singer Edith Piaf in "La Vie En Rose" and Ellen Page as an ultra-cool pregnant teen in "Juno."
"I've never experienced this so it's definitely -- it's crazy and exciting," said Page, who sounded a bit star-struck by her fellow nominees. "It's kind of amazing to know you're going to be in rooms with people who've really inspired you and who you really admire. That's always a really kind of crazy thought that makes my brain explode."
Though he had an Oscar nomination for 2006's "Half Nelson," Globe nominee Ryan Gosling also was in awe of his fellow nominees for best actor in a musical or comedy. Gosling, nominated as a social recluse living a fantasy romance with a life-sized doll in "Lars and the Real Girl," joked that he wants to parlay his awards success into long-term friendships with fellow nominees such as Depp and Hanks.
"They're all guys at some point or another I tried to sneak into restaurants they were in or parties, and now they're stuck with me," Gosling said. "I've never met any of them. I'm a huge fan, and now they'll have to deal with me. It would be rude not to."
Along with Blanchett's turn as Dylan, a cross-dressing role earned John Travolta a supporting-actor nomination for "Hairspray," in which he plays an overweight, homebody housewife.
Adapted from the stage hit that in turn was based on John Waters' 1980s cult film, "Hairspray" has a tradition of using men in that role, but done more campily as a guy-in-drag character. Well-disguised in a fat suit and prosthetic jowls, Travolta played the part as just a quirky woman uneasy about her size.
"Frankly, it was the only choice for me. I like to throw myself into characters. This is a character I had to embrace, to be a woman in it," Travolta said. "I grew up with the most extraordinary and wonderful women in the world, and watching women in musicals."
Dampening Hollywood's awards season, which culminates in the Oscar ceremony Feb. 24, is a strike by the Writers Guild of America, whose 12,000 members stopped working in November over revenues from Internet programming and other new distribution forms.
Many awards shows are written under guild contract, so it remains unclear how the strike might affect the ceremonies.
"I don't know anyone who's rejoicing, regardless of the time of year," said "Sweeney Todd" producer Richard Zanuck. "It's a pretty sad thing, and I drive through the picket line when I go to the studio, when we're shooting outside on the streets of Los Angeles, the pickets are there and they're honking their horns. ... Particularly, I guess, this time of year makes it more tragic."
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Reactions from some of the Golden Globe Award nominees Thursday:
"I never expected anything like this at my age. But I'll accept it." -- Ernest Borgnine, 90, nominated for best actor in a miniseries or movie. He last won a Golden Globe in 1956 for the movie "Marty." Borgnine would be the oldest winner ever if he collects another Golden Globe Award this year.
"I am extremely happy for our brilliant writer and our three terrific actors. I hope they will all remember that they were nothing when I found them." -- Mike Nichols, director of "Charlie Wilson's War," nominated for best picture, comedy. Stars Tom Hanks, Julia Roberts and Philip Seymour Hoffman were also nominated.
"I can't wait to have some rubber chicken and listen to the unscripted banter with all of those fine actresses." -- Jodie Foster, nominated for best actress for "The Brave One."
"Let's face it, when I was first proposed this role, I thought, `What was it about me that made you think I could pull this off?' They said, `You sing, you dance, you're the only one that could probably do this."' -- John Travolta on being nominated for supporting-actor for his role as an overweight housewife in "Hairspray."
"It's just nice to get some praise. Anything to get through the contractions." -- Helena Bonham Carter, who is nine months' pregnant, on being nominated for best actress for "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street."
"It's a little bit weird. I have to kind of wait for the dust to settle and then I'll know exactly how I feel. Right now I don't really feel all that much." -- Casey Affleck, supporting actor nominee for "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford."
"When they said my name, I just started shrieking like a little schoolgirl." -- Diablo Cody, nominated for her screenplay, "Juno."
"I was making waffles for my kids, then my phone rang and my publicist called saying I was nominated. And I noticed this strange smell, and the waffles were burning, and the smoke alarm went off." -- Mary-Louise Parker, nominated for best actress in a television series, comedy or musical for "Weeds."
"I was sitting in my living room actually nursing a hangover when my agent sent a text saying congratulations." -- Keira Knightley on how she learned she was nominated for best actress for "Atonement."
"I'm going to work at 8 a.m. with Mr. Clint Eastwood and Angelina Jolie, so maybe Angelina and I will have a holler and a hoot together." -- Amy Ryan, nominated for supporting actress for "Gone Baby Gone." She is now working on Eastwood's "The Changeling." Jolie was nominated in the dramatic actress category for "A Mighty Heart."
"I'm on a plane to L.A., so I'll be celebrating with my fellow passengers." -- Jason Reitman, director of "Juno," nominated for best picture, comedy or musical.
"A few years ago, my dad passed away, and I share this nomination with him." -- Jeremy Piven, nominated for best supporting actor in a TV series, miniseries or motion picture for "Entourage."
"We're all jumping around at the moment. It's just fantastic. I'm working today, so I don't know whether I'll be able to celebrate, but we'll probably have a nice dinner when we get home from work." -- Saoirse Ronan, 13-year-old best supporting-actress nominee for "Atonement."
"I was screaming and crying. I actually threw a table. I was freaking out." -- Nikki Blonsky, best-actress nominee for "Hairspray."
"To be the little engine that could, it's sort of nice. It's more than sort of nice. It's very gratifying." -- Julie Taymor, director of "Across the Universe," nominated for best picture, comedy or musical.
"My least favorite part is trying to figure out what to wear. Everything else is pretty much wonderful." -- Glenn Close, nominated for best actress for her TV series "Damages."
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