Albany Times Union

‘Promising Young Woman,’ ‘Borat’ WGA winners

“Ted Lasso,”“the Crown” also pick up writer honors

- By Jake Coyle

Sacha Baron Cohen’s “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” was partly improvised and scripted by nine writers, but it still walked away Sunday night with one of the Writers Guild Awards’ top honors, best adapted screenplay.

At the guild’s virtual, prerecorde­d 73rd annual awards, the biggest winners were a pair of awardsseas­on dark horses. Best original screenplay went to the script for the feminist revenge thriller “Promising Young Woman,” by writer-director Emerald Fennell. The film, which is nominated for five Oscars including best picture, triumphed over Aaron Sorkin’s “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” along with “Sound of Metal,” “Judas and the Black Messiah” and “Palm Springs.”

The “Borat” sequel win came over “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” “News of the World,” “One Night in Miami” and “The White Tiger.“Due to guild regulation­s, several of this year’s best-picture nominees at the Academy Awards weren’t nominated, including “Mank,” “Nomadland,” “Minari” and “The Father.”

Cohen and his fellow eight credited writers for the film’s screenplay and story accepted the award by Zoom.

“Thank you for this incredible award, though I can’t help thinking we won it because 60 percent of the Writers Guild worked on this movie,” Cohen said. “A film like this is extremely hard to write partly because it stars real people whose behavior is completely unpredicta­ble. Well, apart from Rudy Giuliani who did everything we hoped for.”

Kal Penn hosted the show, streamed privately for invitees, from his living room. He began dressed in a tuxedo and ended in his pajamas.

Best documentar­y screenplay went to the Jamal Khashoggi documentar­y “The Dissident,” written by director Bryan Fogel and Mark Monroe. The film, which streaming services were too timid to acquire, Fogel has argued, missed out on an Oscar nomination.

Other awards included “Ted Lasso” for comedy series; “The Crown” for drama series; “The Great” for episodic comedy; and “Ozark” for episodic drama.

The guild’s awards came after the conclusion of a two-year battle with talent agencies over potential conflicts of interest as representa­tives of film and TV writers.

Last month, WME became the final big agency to sign the guild’s agreement over an industry practice known as “packaging.”

“Our agency campaign has made us true partners again with our agency representa­tives,” said David Goodman, president of the WGA West.

 ?? Merie Weismiller Wallace / Focus Feature ?? Carey Mulligan, left, Emerald Fennell and Laverne Cox on the set of “Promising Young Woman.”
Merie Weismiller Wallace / Focus Feature Carey Mulligan, left, Emerald Fennell and Laverne Cox on the set of “Promising Young Woman.”

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