Calgary Herald

Salmon fishing where? Snubs, surprises at awards

Thursday’s nomination­s hold few wrinkles

- JAKE COYLE

The Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n is known for a certain quirkiness in its selection process. Any organizati­on that would see fit to nominate Patch Adams and The Tourist for best picture certainly marches to its own beat.

But in the nomination­s announced Thursday, the Golden Globes didn’t throw too many wrinkles into the horse race leading up to the Academy Awards, (which has had its own questionab­le choices in the past). Still, in parsing the nomination­s, there were some intriguing surprises as well as some inevitable questions, most notably: Salmon fishing where?

Yemen. The answer is Yemen. Yes, Lasse Hallstrom’s romantic comedy Salmon Fishing in the Yemen reeled in three unlikely nomination­s: best picture, comedy or musical; Emily Blunt for best actress, comedy or musical; and Ewan McGregor for best actor, comedy or musical.

The film, which had a small run in theatres in the spring, is about an eccentric Yemeni sheik (Amr Waked) who turns to a British salmon expert (McGregor) to bring thousands of salmon to his country. Most critics didn’t bite.

The acclaimed, low-budget Beasts of the Southern Wild has generally been seen as a plucky underdog in the awards season, but the film and its young star, Quvenzhane Wallis, yielded no nomination­s from the Globes.

Instead, the Globes — which tend to favour more seasoned stars — followed the lead of the New York Film Critics Circle, nominating Rachel Weisz for best actress for the little-seen The Deep Blue Sea.

The HFPA responded strongly to Quentin Tarantino’s Spaghetti Western-style slavery epic Django Unchained, giving it five nomination­s: best picture, drama; best director (Tarantino); best screenplay (Tarantino); and two for best supporting actor (Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio). Though the academy may be more divided on the film, Django could be emerging in a way similar to Tarantino’s last film, Inglouriou­s Basterds, which landed eight Oscar nomination­s.

Ang Lee’s 3-D fantasy adventure Life of Pi also fared well, with nomination­s for best picture (drama), best director (Lee) and best score (Mychael Danna). Tarantino and Lee likely squeezed out directors David O. Russell (Silver Linings Playbook) and Tom Hooper (Les Miserables). Hooper, who directed the Oscarwinni­ng The King’s Speech, seemed a particular­ly likely nominee, but the HFPA didn’t go crazy for the musical, which might have also yielded more supporting actor nomination­s.

Blockbuste­rs did not find their way into the mix, as the Globes stayed clear of popular and somewhat acclaimed movies like Skyfall, Looper, The Dark Knight Rises and The Avengers. Perhaps that’s no great shock, but Skyfall, (which got a nomination for best song) could have also slid into contention with Javier Bardem’s supporting role as an effete Bond villain.

By separating best picture and lead actor nomination­s between drama and comedy, the Globes — and this is one of the best thing about them — give comedy the attention most film awards shirk.

Judd Apatow’s This Is 40 might have been assured some notice, but it went empty-handed. Instead, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel continued on an upswing with nomination­s for best picture and best actress in a comedy (Judi Dench). The film also landed a best ensemble nomination from the Screen Actors Guild.

Also gaining momentum was Nicole Kidman, who was nominated for her supporting performanc­e in Lee Daniel’s fevered Southern melodrama The Paperboy. (She got the nod as well for the HBO film Hemingway & Gellhorn.).

Kidman, whose character famously pees on a jelly-fish-stung Zac Efron in the film, also received an unexpected nomination from the Screen Actors Guild.

Robert De Niro’s latest comedic turn as a football-obsessed father in Silver Linings Playbook didn’t garner a nomination. Matthew McConaughe­y, whose year included lauded performanc­es in Bernie and Magic Mike, also escaped notice — a result fans surely dispute.

 ?? Krista Kennell/afp/getty Images/files ?? Dwight Henry, middle, Quvenzhane Wallis, foreground, and crew of Beasts of the Southern Wild at 2012 Governors Awards at the Hollywood & Highland Center on Dec. 1. The film yielded no Globe nomination­s.
Krista Kennell/afp/getty Images/files Dwight Henry, middle, Quvenzhane Wallis, foreground, and crew of Beasts of the Southern Wild at 2012 Governors Awards at the Hollywood & Highland Center on Dec. 1. The film yielded no Globe nomination­s.

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