The Hamilton Spectator

GOLDEN GLOBES: CANADA

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“The Breadwinne­r” and veteran actor Christophe­r Plummer are nominated

TORONTO — The Canadian team behind the animated film “The Breadwinne­r” hopes Monday’s Golden Globe nomination will shine a light on its timely subject matter and promote empathy.

The film stars the voice of Toronto actress Saara Chaudry as 11-yearold Parvana, who disguises herself as a boy in order to support her family while her father is wrongfully imprisoned by the Taliban in Afghanista­n in 2001.

The film is a Canadian co-production and has a homegrown cast, about half of whom are Muslim and have Afghan heritage. Oscar-winning actor-director Angelina Jolie is an executive producer.

“Everyone keeps saying that this is a film that’s come out at the right time because of what’s going on, especially in the States, the Muslim ban, and I think this is a film that can actually help shed a light on what’s going on around the world that we’re not normally used to — especially that’s a film for kids,” Andrew Rosen, a Toronto producer on the film, said in a phone interview after the Golden Globe nomination­s were announced.

“We’ve had a lot of kids watch this and ask their parents and ask at Q-and-As, ‘Is this real’ or ‘Did this happen 100 years ago?’ And we have to say ‘No, this is happening now.’ I think it’s really helpful when families go see it, for families to actually have this conversati­on with their kids.”

“The Breadwinne­r,” which was nominated for best animated film, is adapted from Canadian author Deborah Ellis’s children’s novel. The book is based on the testimony of Afghan women she spoke with in refugee camps in Pakistan. Irish animator Nora Twomey directed and acclaimed Canadian composers Jeff Danna and Mychael Danna did the score for the film, which is open in several cities in Canada and the U.S.

Rosen and his Aircraft Pictures partner Anthony Leo have been working on the project since 2009.

The other co-producing countries are Ireland and Luxembourg.

“It’s a film that shows the effects of war on ordinary people and we don’t see that nearly enough, and I think it will help inform our decisions about whether or not we allow our government­s to go to war,” Ellis said Monday from her home in Simcoe, Ont.

“Do we really want to keep doing this to other people, people who we would probably be friends with if we got to meet them in ordinary time? So I think the film is going to contribute to those kinds of discussion­s and that’s wonderful, because the people who are seeing it now, the young people who are seeing it now, are maybe going to have that stuff imprinted in them — and when they become decision-makers, they might hesitate a little bit before killing people in other countries.”

The Golden Globe Awards will be hosted Jan. 7 by Seth Meyers and broadcast by NBC from the Beverly Hilton Hotel.

Other Golden Globe nomination­s:

Veteran Canadian actor Christophe­r Plummer has been nominated for a Golden Globe Award for his role in “All the Money in the World.” Plummer, 87, replaced Kevin Spacey as billionair­e J. Paul Getty after Spacey was ousted from the movie in the wake of a series of sexual misconduct allegation­s.

Plummer was nominated for best actor in a supporting role.

Toronto-born Eric McCormack is nominated for best actor in a musical or comedy series for “Will and Grace.”

In addition, the HBO series “Big Little Lies,” directed by Montreal’s Jean-Marc Vallee, is in the running for six trophies while Guillermo del Toro’s Cold War-era fairy tale “The Shape of Water, which was shot in Toronto and Hamilton, earned a leading seven nods.

Alberta-shot series “Fargo” was also nominated for TV’s best limited series or motion picture.

“The Handmaid’s Tale,” based on Canadian author Margaret Atwood’s acclaimed novel, also received several nomination­s, including best television drama.

 ?? GKIDS ?? An 11-year-old girl in Kabul disguises herself as a boy to provide for her family in the animated “The Breadwinne­r.”
GKIDS An 11-year-old girl in Kabul disguises herself as a boy to provide for her family in the animated “The Breadwinne­r.”
 ?? VIA YOUTUBE ?? Christophe­r Plummer replaced Kevin Spacey as J. Paul Getty in Ridley Scott’s “All the Money in the World.”
VIA YOUTUBE Christophe­r Plummer replaced Kevin Spacey as J. Paul Getty in Ridley Scott’s “All the Money in the World.”

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