BY BOB TOURTELLOTTE
BEVERLY HILLS, California — Film romance "Atonement" and movie
musical "Sweeney Todd" claimed the top honors at the
strike-plagued Golden Globe Awards on Sunday in a bare-bones
news conference that lacked the usual Hollywood glamour.
"Atonement," a World War Two epic about two
lovers torn apart by a family betrayal and the conflict in
Europe, won the Golden Globe honor for best film drama, and
claimed a second award for best original score.
"Sweeney Todd," which was based on the
popular stage show about a vengeance-seeking barber, also won
two of the most coveted awards – best film musical and best
actor in a musical for Johnny Depp, who starred as the barber.
In other film categories, Daniel Day-Lewis
was named best actor in a drama for his portrayal of a
hardscrabble oil prospector who gains enormous wealth in "There
Will Be Blood," and fellow Briton Julie Christie was best
dramatic actress playing an Alzheimer’s disease sufferer in
"Away From Her."
French actress Marion Cotillard won the
Golden Globe as best actress in a movie musical for her role as
legendary singer Edith Piaf in the subtitled biopic "La Vie En
Rose."
The film awards given out by the Hollywood
Foreign Press Association are a key stop on the road to the
world’s leading film honors, the Oscars, but this year’s gala
dinner, which typically is a champagne-soaked affair with red
carpet arrivals, was scaled way back due to the writers strike.
Some 10,500 Writers Guild members launched
their walkout against the studios on November 5, throwing the TV
season into disarray, derailing film productions and forcing
several awards shows to change their formats.
WGA members threatened to picket the Globes,
leaving nominees and presenters expected to boycott the ceremony
rather than cross picket lines.
Lacking star power, television network NBC
and the HFPA scrapped the usual three-hour-plus gala broadcast,
and in its place the news conference took just over 30 minutes
to air with a string of hosts from cable TV entertainment shows
reading the names of the winners.
Several commented on the night’s unusual
proceedings. Lara Spencer of "The Insider" noted: "It’s a
different Golden Globes than we are used to watching."
"I just wanted to point out that those of us
announcing the award winners are not major movie stars, in case
you didn’t notice," she joked.
But the mood was mostly subdued in the press
conference, filled with several hundred journalists, media
executives, HFPA members and celebrity publicists. Spencer said
the news conference was covered by 57 TV news crews from around
the world, 125 print journalists and some 40 photographers.
In other film awards, best supporting acting
honors went to Javier Bardem for playing a cold-blooded killer
in grim crime thriller "No Country for Old Men" and to Cate
Blanchett for her role as one of several versions of Bob Dylan
in a quirky biopic about the singer, "I’m Not There."
"The Diving Bell and the Butterfly," about a
paralyzed French journalist who dictates a book by blinking his
eye, was named best foreign-language film, and Julian Schnabel
earned the Golden Globe for best director for his work on the
movie.
While the Golden Globes draw the most
attention for their recognition of films, the HFPA also hands
out a number of awards in television categories.
In that arena, cable network AMC’s "Mad Men," about a group
of Madison Avenue advertising executives in the 1960s, was named
best TV drama, and HBO’s recently canceled Hollywood satire
"Extras" was best comedy. – Reuters