Page16:Entertainment Previous Page3  
 
Headline Index
 
Sznews Home Page | Page Index | Headline Index
Next Content 4 Tue, Jan-15-2008 ZoomIn ZoomOut Default
'Atonement' takes top Globe; 'Todd' wins
Tina Fey
"Ratatouille."
A scene from"Atonement."SD-Agencies
Daniel Day Lewis
Cate Blanchett
Johnny Depp

THE tragic romance "Atonement" was named best drama Sunday at a Golden Globes event that was deflated from star-studded revelry to dry, news conference-style awards announcement because of the Hollywood writers strike.

The bloody stage adaptation "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" was chosen as best musical or comedy. Its star, Johnny Depp, won for best actor in a musical or comedy for the title role, playing a vengeful barber who slits the throats of his customers in the adaptation of Stephen Sondheim's stage musical.

Also winning two awards was the crime saga "No Country for Old Men," which earned the screenplay Globe for writer-directors Ethan and Joel Coen and the supporting actor honor for Javier Bardem as a merciless killer tracking a fortune in crime cash poached by an innocent bystander who stumbles onto a drug deal gone bad.

"Atonement" stars Keira Knightley and James McAvoy, both losers in the best dramatic acting categories, in a period drama that traces the dire consequences that follows a jealous teen's false criminal accusation against her sister's new lover.

Daniel Day Lewis was named best dramatic actor for the historical epic "There Will Be Blood," in which he plays a baron of California's oil boom in the early 20th century whose commercial interests put him at odds with a young preacher.

Julie Christie won best dramatic actress for the gloomy drama "Away From Her," starring as a woman succumbing to Alzheimer's who forms a new attachment to a fellow patient that causes heartache for her steadfast husband.

Cate Blanchett won the first award of the night, taking the supporting actress Globe for the Bob Dylan tale "I'm Not There."

Marion Cotillard won for best actress in a musical or comedy for a remarkable personification of singer Edith Piaf in "La Vie En Rose," playing the French icon from youth through middle age and into her ailing final years.

The rodent tale "Ratatouille" -- directed by the Brad Bird was named best animated film.

(SD-Agencies)

Next Content 4 ZoomIn ZoomOutDefault
 

深圳报业集团版权所有,未经书面授权禁止使用 Copyright©2006 by www.sznews.com. all rights reserved.
浏览本网主页,建议将电脑显示屏的分辨率调为1024×768 


   Page01:FrontPage
   Page02:Shenzhen
   Page03:Shenzhen
   Page04:China
   Page05:World
   Page06:Kaleidoscope
   Page07:Sports
   Page08:Photo Highlights
   Page09:Business
   Page10:Markets
   Page11:Industries
   Page12:Speak Shenzhen
   Page13:Leisure Highlights
   Page14:Leisure Highlights
   Page15:Culture
   Page16:Entertainment
'Atonement' takes top Globe; 'Todd' wins
Usual stars, style missing at Golden Globes
Motion pictures
Television