Showing posts with label 72nd Golden Globe Awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 72nd Golden Globe Awards. Show all posts

Monday, January 12, 2015

Amazon takes first ever Globes for ‘Transparent’


LOS ANGELES | Online retail giant Amazon scored its first ever Golden Globes on Sunday with two wins for dark comedy “Transparent” — a breakthrough in its bid to catch up with streaming pioneer Netflix.

The series, starring veteran actor Jeffrey Tambor, tells the story of a man who has transitioned to become a woman and is working out the thorny details of telling his family.

It took home prizes for best comedy/musical series and best actor for Tambor.

“This is dedicated to too many trans people that died too young,” said series creator Jill Soloway. “Maybe we’ll be able to teach the world something about authenticity and truth and love.”

A few minutes later, Tambor accepted his trophy, saying: “Oh, this is big. This is much bigger than me.”

“I would like to dedicate my performance and this award to the transgender community,” he added.

In October, Amazon ordered a second season of the series — the creation of Soloway, an Emmy-nominated writer on cult series “Six Feet Under.” The first season was released on September 26.

Amazon has recently bolstered its streaming video offerings.

But so far, its own original content has not quite reached the popularity level achieved by Netflix, with its signature series “House of Cards” and “Orange Is The New Black.”

“House of Cards” star Kevin Spacey took home the prize for best actor in a television drama — his first Globe in eight nominations.

“This is just the beginning of my revenge,” Spacey joked in the Southern drawl of his character, Frank Underwood.

Showtime’s new series “The Affair” — the story of a love affair gone wrong, told from the perspective of both the man and the woman — took home honors for best drama and best actress (Ruth Wilson).

The best drama series category had been seen as a tough one, with “Downton Abbey,” “Game of Thrones,” “The Good Wife” and “House of Cards” also in the mix.

Another big winner on the television side was “Fargo” — a miniseries based on the Oscar-winning crime thriller film by Joel and Ethan Coen.

It took home prizes for best miniseries or television movie, and best actor in a miniseries or TV movie for Billy Bob Thornton — besting HBO’s widely acclaimed “True Detective” in both categories.

Gina Rodriguez took home the Globe for best comedy TV actress for her breakout performance in “Jane the Virgin” — based on a Venezuelan telenovela.

“Thank you to my mom and my dad for telling me to dream big and to never stop dreaming,” Rodriguez said.

source: interaksyon.com

Thursday, January 8, 2015

‘Birdman’ flying high as Hollywood prepares for Golden Globes


LOS ANGELES | The race to the Oscars begins in earnest Sunday when Hollywood’s A-listers gather for the Golden Globes, with dark comedy “Birdman” leading the pack in the quest for awards glory.

The film — starring onetime “Batman” star Michael Keaton as a washed-up film actor trying to revive his career on stage — earned seven nods for the Globes, the first major event in Tinseltown’s annual awards season.

Coming-of-age drama “Boyhood” and Nazi code-breaking thriller “The Imitation Game” starring Britain’s Benedict Cumberbatch are also in strong position with five nods apiece.

Cumberbatch and his co-star Keira Knightley are among a batch of Britons tipped for gold at the Globes.

Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones are in the running for their heartrending performances as British physicist Stephen Hawking and his wife Jane in “The Theory of Everything,” and Rosamund Pike has earned praise for her searing turn as a wronged wife in “Gone Girl.”

Comic actresses Tina Fey and Amy Poehler will be hosting the show for the third straight year.

Some critics have highlighted the lack of a clear frontrunner, in contrast to previous years like in 2012, when “The Artist” had a virtual lock on Best Picture prizes straight through to the Oscars.

“It seems like a real toss-up,” Tom Nunan of the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television told AFP, adding that actors in this year’s race “are all giving career-best performances.”

TRUE STORIES

This year’s crop of hotly-tipped movies is heavy on true stories: four of the five Globes best drama nominees are based on real-life events.

Among the historical figures featured are Hawking, British mathematician Alan Turing and Martin Luther King Jr.

But “Birdman” will be the film to beat in the Best Musical or Comedy category at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, where the 72nd Globes ceremony begins at 5:00 pm Sunday (0100 GMT Monday).

The movie also earned nods for best actor for Keaton, best supporting actor (Edward Norton), best supporting actress (Emma Stone) and best director (Mexico’s Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu).

Keaton is facing stiff competition from Ralph Fiennes (“The Grand Budapest Hotel”), Bill Murray (“St. Vincent”), Joaquin Phoenix (“Inherent Vice”) and Austrian Oscar-winner Christoph Waltz (“Big Eyes”).

Stone also has her work cut out against Amy Adams (“Big Eyes”), Britons Emily Blunt (“Into the Woods”) and Helen Mirren (“The 100-Foot Journey”), child prodigy Quvenzhane Wallis (“Annie”) and veteran Julianne Moore (“Maps to the Stars”).

On the drama side — unlike the Oscars, the Globes have separate categories for musical/comedies and for dramas — the best film shortlist is topped by “Boyhood,” Richard Linklater’s film about a boy growing up, shot over 12 years.

While “Boyhood” has been widely tipped, its four rivals – “Foxcatcher,” “The Imitation Game,” “Selma” and “The Theory of Everything” — are all strong contenders.

BRITISH GENIUSES

Comic Steve Carell has impressed with a rare serious performance in “Foxcatcher,” but is vying for the best actor prize against a pair of Britons paying math wizards — Cumberbatch as Turing and Redmayne as Hawking.

Britain’s David Oyelowo — who plays King in “Selma” — and Jake Gyllenhaal in lurid crime drama “Nightcrawler” round out the category.

On the small screen, “Fargo” took the most nominations with five.

In the television categories, critics see a free-for-all now that the widely acclaimed “Breaking Bad” is no longer on the air or in the running.

Victories for either “House of Cards” for best drama series and “Orange is the New Black” for best comedy would be sweet for Netflix as on-demand video streaming throws mainstream network television for a loop.

The Globes are handed out by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA) and, while less prestigious than the Academy Awards, they still have huge marketing impact for those nominated and the eventual winners.

Unlike the Oscars, which are voted on by some 6,000 industry members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the Globes are selected by fewer than 100 journalists from the HFPA.

Traditionally, the Globes ceremony is more relaxed than the Oscars, notably due to the fact that alcohol is freely available to the audience.

“The Golden Globes is traditionally a much more amusing television program,” as opposed to the “stodgy” Oscars, Robert Thompson, a professor of pop culture at Syracuse University, told AFP.

This year’s Academy Awards will be held on February 22. Oscar nominations will be announced next week, on January 15.

source: interaksyon.com