Hollywood gears up for Golden Globes

January 10, 2014

Hollywood’s finest hit the red carpet Sunday for the Golden Globes, launching Tinseltown’s most fiercely-contested awards season in years with a wide open field of hotly-tipped movies.

Historical drama 12 Years a Slave and crime caper American Hustle are among the top contenders at the Globes, the first big show of a season which climaxes with the Oscars on 2 March.

But others hoping for gold include 3D space spectacular Gravity, Somali piracy movie Captain Phillips, bleak family drama August: Osage County and Martin Scorsese’s three-hour financial scandal epic The Wolf of Wall Street.

Frontrunners in the best drama actor field include Briton Chiwetel Ejiofor for the title role in 12 Years a Slave, which could also earn a best director Globe for his compatriot Steve McQueen.

For best actress in a drama, the smart money is on Australian Cate Blanchett in Woody Allen’s latest Blue Jasmine, although others tipped include Sandra Bullock for Gravity and Emma Thompson taking on Walt Disney in Saving Mr Banks.

On the small screen – increasingly important as big-screen stars and money migrate to television – Netflix’s pioneering House of Cards could win more gold, as could cult hit Breaking Bad, after its finale in September.

Going into Sunday night’s show in Beverly Hills, 12 Years a Slave and American Hustle have the most nominations with seven nods each, followed by five for black and white road movie Nebraska.

Both frontrunners garnered nods for their main actors, including Ejiofor, Lupita Nyong’o and Michael Fassbender for 12 Years a Slave, and Christian Bale, Bradley Cooper, Amy Adams and Jennifer Lawrence for American Hustle.

Captain Phillips starring Tom Hanks in a real-life tale of a US cargo ship attacked by Somali hijackers, and Gravity, with Bullock as an astronaut abandoned in space with George Clooney, won four nods apiece.

Nominees for best motion picture drama, announced last month, were 12 Years a Slave, Captain Phillips, Gravity, Philomena and Rush.

But there was a snub for Lee Daniels’ The Butler, another historical epic that had been widely tipped for honors for star Oprah Winfrey.

Nominated for best drama actor are Ejiofor, Hanks, Idris Elba for Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom, Matthew McConaughey for Dallas Buyers Club and Robert Redford for All Is Lost.

Three Britons are up for best drama actress: Thompson, Judi Dench for Philomena – about an Irish Catholic’s search for her long-lost son – and Kate Winslet for Labor Day, as well as Blanchett and Bullock.

Nominees for best musical or comedy film are American Hustle, Her, Inside Llewyn Davis, Nebraska and The Wolf of Wall Street.

On the foreign film front, sexually explicit Cannes-winning French movie Blue is the Warmest Color is up against Iran’s The Past, Italy’s The Great Beauty, Denmark’s The Hunt and animated Japanese film The Wind Rises.

American Hustle and 12 Years a Slave have had a series of boosts in recent weeks, winning nominations from the Producers Guild of America (PGA) and the Directors Guild of America (DGA). In the last 10 years, all but one of the winners of the DGA’s top prize went on to win the best director Oscar.

12 Years a Slave also topped nominations for the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) awards, announced last month.

Best director nominees are Alfonso Cuaron for Gravity, David O. Russell for American Hustle, Alexander Payne for Nebraska, Paul Greengrass for Captain Phillips and McQueen for 12 Years a Slave.

On the small screen, nominations for best TV drama have gone to Breaking Bad, which appeared to be the frontrunner, as well as to Downton Abbey, The Good Wife, House of Cards and Masters of Sex.