LOS ANGELES â" Hollywoodâs first big show on the road to the Academy Awards will help determine if silence is golden this season.
The black-and-white silent film âThe Artistâ leads contenders for tonightâs Golden Globes with six nominations, among them best musical or comedy, directing and writing honors for Michel Havanavicius and acting slots for Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo.
Though still playing in narrow release, the film has found enthusiastic audiences and has been a critical darling since premiering at last Mayâs Cannes Film Festival, positioning it as the first silent movie with serious awards prospects since the first years of the Oscars in the late 1920s.
In an age of elaborate computer effects and digital 3-D projection, âThe Artist â is such a throwback to early cinema that it comes off as something entirely fresh.
âItâs very relaxing for people to actually go to this movie,â said Dujardin, nominated for best actor in a musical or comedy for his role as a silent-era star whose career implodes when talkies take over. âItâs a new visual and emotional experience for people. ... Itâs really strange and rare to not hear anything in the theater.â
Tied for second-place at the Globes with five nominations each are George Clooneyâs family tale âThe Descendantsâ and the literary adaptation âThe Help,â both competing for best drama.
Also in the running for best drama: Martin Scorseseâs family adventure âHugoâ; Clooneyâs political thriller âThe Ides of Marchâ; Brad Pittâs sports tale âMoneyballâ; and Steven Spielbergâs World War I epic âWar Ho rse.â
For best musical or comedy, âThe Artistâ is up against: Joseph Gordon-Levittâs cancer story â50/50â; Kristen Wiigâs wedding romp âBridesmaidsâ; Woody Allenâs romantic fantasy âMidnight in Parisâ; and Michelle Williamsâ Marilyn Monroe tale âMy Week with Marilyn.â
Along with honors from trade groups such as the directors, actors and writers guilds, the Globes help sort out key contenders for the Oscars, whose nominations balloting closes Friday, with nominees announced Jan. 24.
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A win tonight can firm up a filmâs prospects to triumph at the Oscars, though the Globes have had a bad track record predicting best-picture winners in recent years.
Over the past seven years, only one Globe best-pictu re winner â" 2008âs âSlumdog Millionaireâ â" has gone on to claim the top honor at the Oscars. Before that stretch, the Globes had been on an eight-year streak in which one of its two best-picture recipients went on to become the Oscar champ.
Last year, âThe Social Networkâ won best-drama at the Globes and looked like the early Oscar favorite. But momentum later swung to eventual Oscar best-picture winner âThe Kingâs Speech.â
The Globes generally do a better job predicting who might take home the acting Oscars. A year ago, all four actors who won Oscars earned Globes first â" lead players Colin Firth for âThe Kingâs Speechâ and Natalie Portman for âBlack Swanâ and âThe Fighterâ supporting stars Christian Bale and Melissa Leo.
Along with Clooney, Pitt and Williams, other established stars nominated for Globes include Me ryl Streep in the Margaret Thatcher tale âThe Iron Lady,â Leonardo DiCaprio in the J. Edgar Hoover saga âJ. Edgar,â Glenn Close in the Irish drama âAlbert Nobbsâ and Kate Winslet in the stage adaptation âCarnage.â
The lineup also features many newcomers to the awards scene, among them Wiig for âBridesmaids,â Gordon-Levitt for â50/50,â Michael Fassbender for the sex-addict drama âShame,â Rooney Mara for the thriller âThe Girl with the Dragon Tattooâ and Brendan Gleeson for the Irish crime tale âThe Guard.â
âThe Helpâ picked up three acting nominations: Viola Davis for dramatic actress and Octavia Spencer and Jessica Chastain for supporting actress. Adapted from Kathryn Stockettâs best-seller about black maids speaking out about their white employers during the civil-rights movement, the hit drama has been a career-maker for many of its collaborators, i ncluding first-time director Tate Taylor, a childhood friend of Stockett, and producer Brunson Green.
The Globes are presented by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a group of about 85 entertainment reporters for overseas outlets.
The ceremony, carried live on NBC, is a more laid-back affair than the Oscars, with Globe guests sharing dinner and drinks that can loosen up starsâ tongues when it comes to accepting awards.
Ricky Gervais returns as host for the third year, despite uneasy moments a year ago when he took sharp swipes at celebrities and Golden Globe organizers. It paid off with a boost in ratings for the show, though, so the Globes invited him back.
While Hollywood will be in party mode right through the Feb. 26 Oscars, not every nominee will join the fun. âMidnight in Parisâ director All en, a notorious no-show at awards ceremonies, said he does not believe in competition among films.
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