2006 Golden Globe Winner Predictionsfrom MoviesOnline.ca
Posted By: Hakeem
This Monday the 16th the Foreign Press will announce their Golden Globes winners in their annual gala, and here are my predictions. The Globes are the most important awards after the Oscars, and even though they sometimes go different ways, the Globes always end up helping someone's chances to get nominated or win later at the Oscars if it is a close race.
Best Original Song should go to A Love That Will Never Grow Old from Brokeback Mountain, though they will probably go with Alanis Morissette and her Narnia song Wunderkind. Mostly because of the big name she is. Remember last year when they gave it to Mick Jagger for the Alfie song and then he didn't get an Oscar nom. That sucked though, because the song ruled and deserved to win, but the point is that the Globes like to go with a big name (Bono was a winner too a few years ago and then lost the Oscar to Eminem).
Hakeem's Prediction: Alanis Morissette's Wunderkind from The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.Best Original Score should go to Gustavo Santaolalla's sublime work in Brokeback. The way he played just the right tunes when the lead characters interacted with each other gave their love even more resonance. John Williams has had the most buzz so far having scored three big movies this year, and his Memoirs of a Geisha one was probably the best of them (War of the Worlds and Munich were also his). The award will go to him this time, but expect Santaolalla to take the big one home next month.
Hakeem's Prediction: John Williams for Memoirs of a Geisha.Best Foreign Film should go to Kung Fu Hustle, even though it was originally released years ago and it's not eligible for this year’s Oscar. But it got released here in the States this year so it qualifies for the Globes, and it's my favorite of the ones nominated. Not sure why OldBoy wasn't nominated, or The Edukators, Downfall or 2046. Very weird nominations. Anyway, the Globe will go to Paradise Now or Tsotsy, two very important movies. Of the two I've only seen Paradise Now and it's excellent, and I'm making it my pick for the fact that many other movies this year have included Palestinian suicide bombers (like Syriana and Munich), but none of them was as good as this one.
Hakeem's Prediction: Paradise Now from Palestine.Best Screenplay will be all about Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco's work in Crash, a movie that despite being released early in the year, has had very strong legs and it's pretty much a lock for an Oscar nom. Nobody will probably go with Haggis as a director being that this is his first big job behind the camera, and they snubbed him last year for his Million Dollar Baby screenplay so this year they are giving it to him no matter what. Munich and Brokeback have no chance here, especially with Crash being an original work. Woody Allen's Match Point should have a chance. This is his best work in years it seems and the screenplay is always his strongest work, but there's no buzz. That he came back with something great and was nominated is award enough I think. The only one that could upset Crash is George Clooney for Good Night, and Good Luck, mostly because Clooney should end the night with at least one award, and this is his best chance, a politically charged script that he also directed. Still, I'm predicting he'll win none.
Hakeem's Prediction: Paul Haggis and Bobby Moresco for Crash.Best Supporting Actress is an easy category, especially since my favorite one, Amy Adams in Junebug, was criminally omitted, so they are most likely going with Michelle Williams' work in Brokeback. She's new to this, and she's young and her performance was excellent even if it was kind of smallish. I did not like Frances McDormand's work (North Country), nor Rachel Weisz's (The Constant Gardener), whose character I actually hated, but I did not like their movies so I guess that doesn't help. Shirley MacLaine was good in In Her Shoes, a movie I really liked, but I felt that both Cameron Diaz and Toni Collette gave better performances.
Hakeem's Prediction: Michelle Williams for Brokeback Mountain.Best Supporting Actor should go to Matt Dillon. His was my favorite performance in Crash and it's his strongest work in a very long career where he's done pretty much everything. I was actually surprised that they nominated him though, but it makes total sense. This is a tough category since everybody is nominating very different people. Will Ferrell (The Producers) has no chance though, nor Bob Hoskins for Mrs. Henderson Presents, unless he wins and then he’s a front-runner for the Oscar. The other two spots are Clooney for Syriana and Paul Giamatti for Cinderella Man. Again, Clooney should win something, though for this would be wrong, because his character was a lead in the movie. Giamatti lost best actor last year here and then was snubbed of an Oscar nom, so maybe the Globes will give it to him this time to cement his chances for an Oscar. I liked his performance, worthy of a nomination I mentioned in my review, but he needed a big scene that would make you give him the award. The again, I said the same thing about Morgan Freeman last year and he won the Oscar (though not the Globe).
Hakeem's Prediction: Matt Dillon for Crash.Best Actress in a Drama I can't really call, because I haven't seen Felicity Huffman's work in TransAmerica, the front-runner so far. Of the rest, I absolutely loved Gwyneth Paltrow in Proof, and it's one of my top three female performances of the year, but the movie didn't make any money and has had no buzz, so we can probably count her out. Then we have Maria Bello for A History of Violence, where hers was a very strong but supporting performance; Ziyi Zhang for Memoirs of a Geisha, where she was overshadowed by Michelle Yeoh's fantastic work; and Charlize Theron for North Country, which was a great performance in a movie I didn't like. Plus none of them have had any buzz lately. Felicity Huffman's had all the buzz needed (though not as much as Witherspoon, thank God she's in the other category), and the role (that of a transsexual) looks and sounds like it works and it's very strong, so I'm going with her (plus she won't win for her TV role in Desperate Housewives so this one is for her).
Hakeem's Prediction: Felicity Huffman for TransAmerica.Best Actress in a Comedy/Musical will definitely go to Reese Witherspoon for her excellent portrayal of June Carter in Walk the Line. She sings in the movie, and cries and she's tough and she has an accent to do. It's just perfect. The other big reason she'll win is because none of the other performances is even close enough to hers. Sarah Jessica Parker being here is just the Foreign Press showing her love (she's been nominated like 8 straight years now, tying Nicole Kidman I think who had the same support last year with that Birth nomination). Yes, she gives the best performance in The Family Stone, but it's not a lead role, they were all supporting there, so she's out here. Laura Linney the same, great performance, but supporting, and it's worst that Parker because Jeff Daniels and the kids were better than her. Then Judy Dench and Keira Knightley, the only ones that could upset Reese. I don't think the Dame will be able to pull it off, just because Mrs. Henderson Presents has received mediocre reviews at best (I haven't seen the movie so I can't give an opinion performance wise). Knightley on the other hand, I saw and was delighted. She's breathtaking in Pride & Prejudice, and the movie has received excellent reviews all stating that she's great. With so few great female performances this year, there's some talk of Keira upsetting Reese and then P&P taking the big award from Walk the Line, but I just don't see it.
Hakeem's Prediction: Reese Witherspoon for Walk the Line.Best Actor in a Comedy/Musical will go to Joaquin Phoenix. Now, I don't think at all that his performance is better Jamie Foxx's last year, but Joaquin does his own singing in Walk the Line, and that has to count for something. Still, Phoenix is just great in the movie, and he doesn't have much competition to tell you the truth. Johnny Depp is out, this was a weird nom for portraying a totally weird character, which is good, but there's no way they are giving him the award. His Michael Jackson's Willy Wonka is not in the same league as his Keith Richards' Captain Jack Sparrow. Then Cillian Murphy is nominated just because the role is difficult, another transsexual. But Breakfast on Pluto has received bad reviews, and there's no buzz for him so he's out. Nathan Lane being here is just like Kevin Spacey's nom last year. There's a musical, they need to nominate its people, but Lane's performance is not worthy of awards. Pierce Brosnan being nominated is just great, though again not worthy of an award. But I'm glad he's here because his work in The Matador is great, and totally against his usual James Bond, and Thomas Crow, and that After the Sunset guy. The only possible upset could be by Jeff Daniels for his excellent performance in The Squid and the Whale, a movie I loved (number 27 in my best of the year list) and thought it was better than Walk the Line. And Daniels has had a career where he's done everything (just to think that he was in Dumb and Dumber) and this would be a good tie to reward him and give him a much needed boost for the Oscars. I'm predicting that the Foreign Press will go with Walk the Line all the way but if they don't, then Daniels is winning this one.
Hakeem's Prediction: Joaquin Phoenix for Walk the Line.Best Actor in a Drama is the toughest call of the night. Cinderella Man's Russell Crowe is out, as is Terrence Howard for Hustle & Flow. I would love for him to win which would probably get him an Oscar nom, but I don't think so. Then one of the locks for an Oscar nom is David Strathairn for Good Night, and Good Luck. I don't really love his performance of Ed Murrow. It's very blank and monotonous. And critics have loved him so far, but they are all going with Phillip Seymour Hoffman and his spot on, creepy wonderful performance of Truman Capote in Capote, another movie I didn't love. My personal pick is Heath Ledger and his mind-blowing work in Brokeback Mountain, where he's just perfect. The thing is that Hoffman deserves an award, there's no doubt about that, and the Foreign Press will give him the Globe, but I don't think he'll get the Oscar next month.
The big one will go to Ledger who gives a better performance with more difficult role, and is a character more likeable than Hoffman's. You leave Capote not liking him, and that's going to influence the voters towards Ledger's (without saying to much so I don't spoil it) heartbroken ending. Hakeem's Prediction: Heath Ledger for Brokeback Mountain.Best Director will go to Ang Lee for Brokeback Mountain. He's won all the other critics' awards, and he's loved by the Foreign Press having nominated him for Sense and Sensibility and giving him the Globe for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (btw, all his great work gets awarded every 5 years it seems, 1996, 2001 and now in 2006). The other nominees are all out of the picture except for George Clooney who has a minimal chance, but again, because of the fact that he has 3 noms and should win one. But he won't be able to pull it off, Ang Lee is just too strong. Then Woody Allen could have a chance, he's nominated for directing and for the screenplay, and Match Point is nominated for best picture and Scarlett is nominated too, but there's no buzz for him, especially in the Best Screenplay category, so a directing award seems pretty impossible. Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg are out just because King Kong and Munich didn't get a best picture nom (and pretty weird that David Cronenberg didn't get a nom since his A History of Violence is nominated). And then Fernando Meirelles for The Constant Gardener, another movie I didn't like. Politically charged and important, but Weisz's character I totally hated and that hurt my view of the movie. The movie did get a best picture nom, and Weisz did get nominated, but the screenplay and Ralph Fiennes were overlooked, so I'm counting Meirelles out.
Hakeem's Prediction: Ang Lee for Brokeback Mountain.[]Best Picture Musical/Comedy[/b] is a weak category. The Producers was bad I thought and it's here because it's a musical. The Squid and the Whale didn't get its screenplay nominated, the best thing it has, so it's here just because there's nothing else to nominate. The same goes to Mrs. Henderson Presents. Bad reviews, and no support for acclaimed director Stephen Frears, but it's European so that gave it the spot. Again, there's talk of a Pride & Prejudice upset, and even though I loved the movie and though it was better than Walk the Line, there's no way the Johnny Cash biopic is not winning. Ok, so no love for director James Mangold (who didn't impress me at all), but the movie will win the acting awards so this is pretty much a lock.
Hakeem's Prediction: Walk the Line.Best Picture Drama will go indisputably to Brokeback Mountain. Is the most awarded movie of the year by the critics, and it's had all the buzz in the world. It's an important movie, revolutionary even, that everybody is respecting and giving it their praise. Plus it'll win awards for all its nominated performances and its director, so there's no way it's losing here. Good Night, and Good Luck is a distant second, especially with Munich not nominated. And btw, I'm not liking how some of the press is pushing for Munich lately. They didn't even like it judging by the mostly mediocre reviews and a rotten rating from the big name critics.
But whatever, it's not here, and so Clooney's movie is the only possible upset, but the movie is just so small that I think it's impossible. Then it's Match Point, which's gotten a ton of nominations but mostly because everybody is happy Woody Allen is back; then it's The Constant Gardener which did not get enough noms like to do any fighting here; and finally A History of Violence with pretty much the same problem, no Cronenberg, no screenplay, and no Viggo Mortensen.
Hakeem's Prediction: Brokeback Mountain. ------------------------------------------------------------
Global WarmingFrom: AAP
By Peter Mitchell in Los Angeles
January 16, 2006 WILL the Golden Globe go to the gay cowboy, the starving boxer with a big heart or the American literary great?
Heath Ledger, Russell Crowe and roly-poly New York art house actor Philip Seymour Hoffman battle for the Golden Globes best dramatic actor award in Beverly Hills tomorrow in what is a significant test run for the March 5 Academy Awards.
The winner will not only have an impressive Globe trophy to place in their trophy cabinet, but will likely emerge as the favourite in the actor's race for the March 5 Oscars ceremony.
Ledger, probably still a little damp after being sprayed by paparazzi armed with water pistols at the Sydney premiere of Brokeback Mountain, has flown to Los Angeles for the Globes ceremony with girlfriend Michelle Williams.
Williams has also been nominated, in the best supporting category, for Brokeback Mountain.
The Globes are decided by about 80 members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.
Despite the small number of Globes voters - the Oscars from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences have about 6000 voters and the Screen Actors Guild Awards have more than 100,000 voters - the Globes are considered a key indicator for the Oscars.
Oscar pundits, including Los Angeles Times columnist and awards expert Tom O'Neil, believe Ledger and Crowe need to win to have a chance of claiming the Oscar.
Hoffman has the early momentum after winning most of the other lead-up awards for his portrayal of American literary great Truman Capote in the independent film, Capote.
"Philip Seymour Hoffman is an art house darling and he nailed Capote so perfectly," O'Neil told AAP.
"What is so impressive about Brokeback is Heath's deeply felt suffering and anguish that really comes through on the screen."
O'Neil has tipped Hoffman to win the Globe.
Bookmakers agree.
Hoffman is the outright favourite at 8/11, while Ledger, who plays a gay Wyoming ranch hand in Brokeback, is on the second line of betting at 7/4.
The other nominees are given little chance, with Terrence Howard, for his performance in Hustle and Flow, and David Strathairn in Good Night, And Good Luck, equal third at 10/1.
New Zealand-born Crowe, for his demanding performance as struggling 1930s heavyweight boxing champion and devoted family man James Braddock in Cinderella Man, is the outsider at 12/1.
In past years Australians have filled both the film and TV categories at the Globes, but this year Australia's other hopes - Eric Bana (Munich), Geoffrey Rush (Munich), Naomi Watts (King Kong), Anthony LaPaglia (Without a Trace) and Julian McMahon (Nip/Tuck) - were all snubbed by Globes voters.
The Globes best actress in a film drama category nominees are: Maria Bello (A History of Violence), Felicity Huffman (Transamerica), Gwyneth Paltrow (Proof), Charlize Theron (North Country) and Ziyi Zhang (Memoirs of a Geisha).
The hit TV drama Desperate Housewives received the most nominations of any TV show with five.
The show's four leads - Marcia Cross, Felicity Huffman, Eva Longoria and Teri Hatcher - filled up four of the five nominations for best actress in a comedy-musical TV series. Mary-Louis Parker, from the new TV series Weeds, filled the fifth slot.
# The Golden Globes ceremony will be staged at the Beverly Hilton Hotel from midday on Tuesday (AEDT).
Australian Eastern Daylight Time
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Golden Globes a Party for New NomineesDAVID GERMAIN
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - Hollywood has a term for the celebrity hoopla that precedes its big parties, such as the Academy Awards and Golden Globes. On the red carpet heading in, it's known as "arrivals."
Monday's 63rd annual Globes usher in an awards season heavy on stars new to the game, young actors in breakout roles and veterans who have finally arrived.
Sure, the lineup includes plenty of perennials such as past Oscar winners or nominees Russell Crowe, Gwyneth Paltrow, Shirley MacLaine, Charlize Theron, Johnny Depp, Frances McDormand, Judi Dench and Laura Linney.
But among the front-runners are dual-nominee Felicity Huffman, respected character actor Philip Seymour Hoffman and rising star Heath Ledger. Other old hands and fresh faces catching their first serious awards attention include Ziyi Zhang, Keira Knightley, Terrence Howard, David Strathairn, Matt Dillon, Cillian Murphy, Rachel Weisz and Michelle Williams.
It's even turned out to be a breakout year of sorts for an actor as big as George Clooney, a past Globe winner for "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" and a three-time TV nominee for "ER."
Along with a supporting-actor nomination for the oil-industry thriller "Syriana," Clooney earned a best-director nomination for his Edward R. Murrow tale "Good Night, and Good Luck," competing alongside such veteran filmmakers as Steven Spielberg ("Munich"), Woody Allen ("Match Point"), Peter Jackson ("King Kong") and Ang Lee ("Brokeback Mountain").
For Clooney, who previously directed "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind," the move into directing is a means to extend his longevity in Hollywood.
"You only get a certain amount of time ... in front of the camera before people go, `Enough,'" Clooney said. "So you want to get to the point where you can write and direct and produce so you can still remain productive when people get sick of seeing you.
"I've done two films and had to act in both to the get the financing. The next time, I sure would like to not be in it. It is the only part of directing I don't really like, to direct myself."
Along with "Good Night, and Good Luck," Globe nominees for best drama are "Brokeback Mountain," "The Constant Gardener," "A History of Violence" and "Match Point." Nominated for best movie musical or comedy are "Mrs. Henderson Presents," "Pride & Prejudice," "The Producers," "The Squid and the Whale" and "Walk the Line."
The Globes also may signal the arrival of more tolerant times toward gay-themed films. The cowboy romance "Brokeback Mountain," starring Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal as sheepherders who share a summer of love then conceal an ongoing affair from their wives, leads the field with seven nominations and has emerged as a potential best-picture favorite both for the Globes and the Oscars, whose nominations come out Jan. 31.
The affair in "Brokeback Mountain" begins in the 1960s, a time when society would more likely frown on a gay romance, especially between modern cowboys expected to be rugged, manly and straight.
"I think it's easier today, even though it still can be impossible in some places," director Lee said. "I think we're moving toward a more open-minded world, more tolerant. But still, it can be difficult."
Ledger, nominated for best actor in a drama, proved he was far more than just a hunky young leading man with a powerful performance as a man torn between the machismo society expects of him and the longings of his heart. Williams, up for supporting actress as Ledger's wife, showed striking depth as an anguished woman who chooses to ignore her husband's forbidden love to hold her family together.
Along with Ledger, Hoffman is considered a front-runner for best dramatic actor for his remarkable embodiment of Truman Capote, the gay raconteur whose gradual emotional deterioration is chronicled in "Capote," the story of the author's obsessive exertions to research and write the true-crime novel "In Cold Blood."
Huffman, an Emmy winner for "Desperate Housewives," could come away with two Golden Globes. She is nominated for best actress in a TV comedy or musical, along with "Desperate Housewives" co-stars Marcia Cross, Teri Hatcher and Eva Longoria, and Huffman also is up for best actress in a film drama for "Transamerica," in which she plays a man preparing for surgery to become a woman.
It was the first time Huffman had ever been offered a lead role or even a significant part in a film, after years of toiling as a respected stage and television actress.
Did it bother Huffman that she was considered someone who could credibly pose as a man?
"I've been asked that question before, and to tell you the truth, it does nothing. I go, `Great,'" Huffman said. "I've never been a beauty. It's not my thing. I mean, my face is fine, you know? So I really didn't have anything to lose or to risk, and I sort of know what I look like, and yeah, I think I can look very androgynous."
The Globes are known as a loose, relaxed awards show compared to the staid Oscars, a place where stars can cut loose a bit, have fun and realize that win or lose, life goes on.
"The truth is, I'm pretty levelheaded about stuff," Clooney said. "I won a Golden Globe once. It's an amazingly fun night, you get drunk, everybody calls you, you get flowers. A couple of days later, it sits on a shelf and you go back to work."
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