Dec 13, 2007 12:00 pm US/Mountain
'Atonement' Leads With 7 Globe Nods
Keira Knightley Historical Romance Receives 7 Nominations
LOS ANGELES (AP) ―
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"Atonement" leads the nominations with seven both Keira Knightley and James McAvoy are nominated.
AP
The British historical romance "Atonement" led the competition for
the Golden Globes with seven nominations Thursday, including best drama
and acting honors for Keira Knightley and James McAvoy.
Other best drama nominees for the 65th Golden Globes were the crime
sagas "American Gangster," "Eastern Promises" and "No Country for Old
Men," the inspirational college drama "The Great Debaters," the legal
drama "Michael Clayton" and the California oil-boom epic "There Will Be
Blood." Globe voters picked seven dramatic nominees, rather than the
usual five.
Nominated for best comedy or musical were the Beatles musical
"Across the Universe," the foreign-policy romp "Charlie Wilson's War,"
the Broadway adaptation "Hairspray," the teen-pregnancy comedy "Juno"
and the bloody musical "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street."
Adapted from the novel by Ian McEwan, "Atonement" earned dramatic
actress and actor nominations for Knightley and McAvoy, who play lovers
whose newfound romance is shattered after Knightley's jealous younger
sister (Saoirse Ronan) falsely accuses McAvoy of a crime.
"Atonement" also had nominations for Ronan as supporting actress,
director for Joe Wright, screenplay for Christopher Hampton and musical
score for Dario Marianelli.
"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," the
13-year-old Ronan said after learning she was a nominee.
"It's a brilliant way to start the holiday season," she said.
No clear front-runners have yet emerged in the long buildup to the
Academy Awards race, so the big nominations haul could make an early
favorite out of "Atonement," which just opened theatrically last week.
Oscar nominations come out nine days after the Golden Globes ceremony
Jan. 13.
Joining Knightley in the dramatic actress category was Cate
Blanchett for her title role as the British monarch in "Elizabeth: The
Golden Age." Blanchett also had a supporting-actress nomination for her
gender-bending role as an incarnation of Bob Dylan in "I'm Not There."
Also earning two nominations was Philip Seymour Hoffman, for lead
actor in a comedy or musical in the sibling tale "The Savages" and
supporting actor for "Charlie Wilson's War."
A comic look at a congressman (Tom Hanks), a Texas socialite (Julia
Roberts) and a slovenly CIA man (Hoffman) who engineered the covert
U.S. response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, "Charlie Wilson's
War" ran second to "Atonement" with five nominations.
Hanks was cited for best actor in a comedy or musical, while Roberts was nominated as supporting actress.
Surprising omissions in the musical or comedy category were Judd
Apatow's "Knocked Up" and "Superbad," both huge critical and box-office
hits, as well as his upcoming parody "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story."
"Walk Hard" star John C. Reilly was nominated in the best musical or
comedy actor category, however.
Also overlooked: Tommy Lee Jones and Josh Brolin, who had acclaimed
performances in "No Country for Old Men." Their co-star Javier Bardem,
who has a chilling role as a relentless killer trailing a man who made
off with a fortune in drug money, was nominated for supporting actor.
A critics favorite, "No Country for Old Men" also had nominations
for Joel and Ethan Coen for both directing and their screenplay,
adapted from Cormac McCarthy's novel.
Eddie Vedder also received two nominations, for best score for the
road drama "Into the Wild" and for an original song he wrote for the
film, "Guaranteed." Besides his best-actor nomination, Reilly also is
up for original song for the theme from "Walk Hard," which he co-wrote
with Marshall Crenshaw, Apatow and director Jake Kasdan.
Perpetual awards favorite Clint Eastwood did not even have a movie
of his own out this year but scored two Globe nominations, for his
score and the title song for the Iraq War drama "Grace Is Gone." Sean
Penn, the Oscar-winning star of Eastwood's "Mystic River," was shut out
in the directing category for "Into the Wild," while Penn's lead actor
Emile Hirsch also missed out on a nomination.
Denzel Washington, director of "The Great Debaters," had a best
dramatic actor nomination for "American Gangster," in which he plays a
1970s Harlem heroin baron. Russell Crowe, who plays the cop who brings
him down, was snubbed by Globe voters, though.
Along with Washington and McAvoy, dramatic-actor nominees were
George Clooney as a conscious-torn lawyer in "Michael Clayton," Daniel
Day-Lewis as an oil tycoon in early 20th century California in "There
Will Be Blood" and Viggo Mortensen as a Russian mobster in "Eastern
Promises."
Joining Knightley and Blanchett in the dramatic-actress
category were Julie Christie as a woman succumbing to Alzheimer's in
"Away From Her," Jodie Foster as a Manhattan vigilante in "The Brave
One" and Angelina Jolie as journalist Mariane Pearl in "A Mighty
Heart."
Actresses who became instant box-office stars in 2007 earned
nominations for best actress in a musical or comedy: Nikki Blonsky as a
vivacious Baltimore teen in "Hairspray," Amy Adams as an exiled
fairy-tale princess in "Enchanted" and Ellen Page as a sardonic
pregnant teen in "Juno."
(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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