Chicago Sun-Times

WHO WILL WIN A GOLDEN GLOBE — AND WHO SHOULD?

Awards don’t always play out the way viewers might expect, so USA TODAY’s Brian Truitt predicts who will win and who should win in top movie categories at the 73rd Golden Globe Awards

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DRAMA

Carol Mad Max: Fury Road The Revenant Room Spotlight

WILL WIN/SHOULD WIN:

Spotlight There is clear competitio­n for the Oscar best picture frontrunne­r, from sprawling epic ‘Revenant’ to artful action movie ‘Mad Max’ to the sumptuousl­y 1950s ‘Carol.’ However, director Tom McCarthy’s look at The Boston Globe’s exposé of the Catholic Church abuse cover-up is an amazingly crafted affair, so expect the journalism drama to continue its awards season run here.

COMEDY OR MUSICAL

The Big Short Joy The Martian Spy Trainwreck WILL WIN: The Big Short

SHOULD WIN: The Martian Adam McKay’s ‘Big Short’ has what it needs to win: noteworthy efforts from A-listers Christian Bale, Steve Carell and Brad Pitt, plus enough laughs for the sharp financial disaster film to be considered a comedy. Don’t discount Matt Damon’s one-liners as ‘The Martian’s’ astronaut stuck in space, though. While more drama than not, director Ridley Scott’s effort is light years more de- serving than the rest.

ACTOR, DRAMA

Bryan Cranston, Trumbo Leonardo DiCaprio,

The Revenant

Michael Fassbender,

Steve Jobs

Eddie Redmayne, The Danish Girl

Will Smith, Concussion

WILL WIN/SHOULD WIN:

DiCaprio The “Get Leo his first Oscar!” train is rolling and this is just another stop for the actor, who does some of his best work ever as hard-to-kill, bears-be-damned frontiersm­an Hugh Glass. His win will look even more impressive against a good field, with last year’s winner Redmayne coming back with an arguably better performanc­e in ‘Danish Girl’ and Fassbender nailing the iconically eccentric Jobs.

ACTRESS, DRAMA

Cate Blanchett, Carol Brie Larson, Room Rooney Mara, Carol Saoirse Ronan, Brooklyn Alicia Vikander,

The Danish Girl WILL WIN: Larson

SHOULD WIN: Ronan There’s no bad pick in this bunch, the Globes’ most competitiv­e category. Vikander and Mara would have been better off in supporting actress, where they’ll likely land at the Oscars. Blanchett will be going for her fourth Globe win, though it’s probably Larson’s to lose as the embattled single mom of ‘Room.’ Yet Ronan is simply fantastic as an immigrant torn between her Irish home and America.

ACTOR, COMEDY OR MUSICAL

Christian Bale, The Big Short Steve Carell, The Big Short Matt Damon, The Martian Al Pacino, Danny Collins Mark Ruffalo,

Infinitely Polar Bear

WILL WIN/SHOULD WIN:

Damon Bale and Carell cancel each other out as ‘Big Short’s’ most colorful money men. Look for ‘The Martian’s’ talented star to blast off for his first Globe win as an actor (Damon and Ben Affleck snagged screenplay honors in 1998 for ‘Good Will Hunting’), thanks to his sheer charm, likability and ability to grow space potatoes as “super-botanist” Mark Watney.

ACTRESS, COMEDY OR MUSICAL

Jennifer Lawrence, Joy Melissa McCarthy, Spy Amy Schumer, Trainwreck Maggie Smith, The Lady In the Van

Lily Tomlin, Grandma

WILL WIN/SHOULD WIN:

Lawrence If we’re talking pure comedy, McCarthy and Schumer both are good for many laughs as an accidental superspy and a trainwreck of a party girl, respective­ly. Lawrence is a favorite of the Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n — she has been honored twice previously for ‘Silver Linings Playbook’ and ‘American Hustle’ — but the ‘Joy’ star will hoist this year’s trophy for her all-around excellent performanc­e as a fledgling entreprene­ur with a crazy home life.

SUPPORTING ACTOR

Paul Dano, Love & Mercy

Idris Elba, Beasts of No Nation

Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies

Michael Shannon, 99 Homes Sylvester Stallone, Creed

WILL WIN/SHOULD WIN:

Stallone Elba is powerful as ‘Beasts’’ intimidati­ng warlord and Rylance brings quiet intensity to his Soviet operative in ‘Spies.’ Still, from seemingly out of nowhere, Stallone turns in his best performanc­e since, well, his Oscar-nominated role in 1976’s original ‘Rocky.’ He’s got serious punch and gravitas as an aging Rocky Balboa who’s both a mentor to a young upand-comer and a man fighting the breakdown of his own body.

SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Jane Fonda, Youth Jennifer Jason Leigh, The Hateful Eight Helen Mirren, Trumbo Alicia Vikander, Ex Machina Kate Winslet, Steve Jobs WILL WIN: Fonda

SHOULD WIN: Leigh This category could go all sorts of ways, so it nicely encapsulat­es this thus-far-wholly-unpredicta­ble awards season. Any of the women could capture the Globe, though Fonda may have an advantage in terms of body of work and a role, as an old Hollywood icon in ‘Youth,’ that’s made for acceptance speeches. But Leigh is spectacula­r in her own right as Quentin Tarantino’s snarling, singing ‘Hateful’ fugitive Daisy Domergue.

DIRECTOR

Todd Haynes, Carol Alejandro González Iñárritu, The Revenant

Tom McCarthy, Spotlight George Miller, Mad Max: Fury Road

Ridley Scott, The Martian WILL WIN: Scott

SHOULD WIN: Miller No filmmaker got better performanc­es out of his cast than McCarthy, though none had quite the troublesom­e row to hoe as Iñárritu. That said, the foreign press will likely honor Scott for his feel-good outer space drama, but Miller should get it simply for having the chutzpah to juggle doomsday vehicles and mind-blowing action while never losing sight of the importance of memorable and lasting character work.

 ?? KERRY HAYES, OPEN ROAD FILMS ?? Michael Keaton, Liev Schreiber, Mark Ruffalo, RachelMcAd­ams, John Slattery and Brian dArcy James play Boston Globe staffers investigat­ing the Catholic Church in Spotlight.
KERRY HAYES, OPEN ROAD FILMS Michael Keaton, Liev Schreiber, Mark Ruffalo, RachelMcAd­ams, John Slattery and Brian dArcy James play Boston Globe staffers investigat­ing the Catholic Church in Spotlight.

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