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Get Out, Call Me by Your Name win big at Writers Guild Awards

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LOS ANGELES — Get Out and Call Me by Your Name won top prizes at the Writers Guild of America Awards Sunday, three weeks before the Oscars, the glittering climax of Hollywood’s awards season.

Writer-director Jordan Peele picked up the trophy for best original screenplay for Get Out, a dark satire of the African-American experience and liberal white guilt.

“This was a passion project. It was something I put my love into, I put my soul into, so getting this from you means so much,” Peele said as he picked up his trophy.

“I started writing it in 2008 and there were a lot of ups and downs.”

The film, starring Daniel Kaluuya, has already landed Peele best first time feature at the Directors Guild of America Awards and is nominated for four statuettes at the Oscars, to be held on March 4.

Get Out beat out The Big Sick, I, Tonya, Lady Bird, and The Shape of Water.

The evening was hosted for the third year in a row by Emmy and Grammy-winning actor, writer, and comedian Patton Oswalt, who began by lightheart­edly chastising the WGA for bringing him back.

“Given the current atmosphere, maybe get a female host next year. There are hilarious comedians and writers out there,” he said.

James Ivory scooped the prize for best adapted screenplay for his work transformi­ng Andre Aciman’s 2007 novel Call Me by Your Name into the film of the same name, starring Timothee Chalamet.

Luca Guadagnino’s paean to the universal heartbreak of first love, set in 1980s northern Italy, bested highly touted rivals, including The Disaster Artist,

Logan, Molly’s Game, and Mudbound. It is also nominated for four Oscars, including nods for Ivory’s screenplay, best picture, best actor for Chalamet, and best original song.

Best documentar­y screenplay went to Brett Morgen for Jane, a study of the life and work of celebrated primatolog­ist Jane Goodall, whose groundbrea­king chimpanzee research revolution­ized people’s understand­ing of the natural world. In the television category, Hulu’s The Handmaid’s Tale won both best drama and best new series, while HBO’s Veep took best comedy series.

The WGAs is one of Hollywood’s last major prizegivin­g ceremonies ahead of the Academy Awards.

It is not considered as reliable a predictor of Oscars glory as the other guilds’ prize-giving nights, however, as members can only shortlist scripts written under WGA guidelines or those of several internatio­nal partners. —

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