Windsor Star

GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS CONTENDERS NAMED

Stallone receives second nomination for Rocky character

- JAKE COYLE

Though the Golden Globes spread its nomination­s around, the Hollywood Foreign Press Associatio­n swooned hardest for Todd Haynes’ 1950s romance Carol, which landed a leading five nomination­s including best picture, drama.

In a widespread field of nomination­s announced Thursday in Beverly Hills, Calif., Carol solidified its growing Oscar hopes with nods for its two stars, Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara, and for Haynes’ direction.

Also surging was Adam McKay’s finance farce The Big Short, which earned four nomination­s, including best picture, comedy, and nods for Steve Carell and Christian Bale.

Also with four nods is Alejandro Inarritu’s followup to his Oscarwinni­ng Birdman, the frontier epic The Revenant, which was nominated for best picture, drama, and best actor for Leonardo DiCaprio.

A four-time Oscar nominee (and one-time Globe winner), DiCaprio is gunning for his first Academy Award.

Tied with four is the Aaron Sorkin-scripted Steve Jobs, though it failed to join the best picture nominees.

Along with Carol and The Revenant, they are: Mad Max: Fury Road, Room and Spotlight.

Streaming series from Netflix (which led television with nine nods), Amazon and Hulu dominated the TV side of the Globes, which jumped all over the dial.

Six shows tied for the most nomination­s: Fargo, Mr. Robot, Outlander, Transparen­t, American Crime and Wolf Hall.

In an awards season that has so far failed to produce a definite heavyweigh­t, Tom McCarthy’s acclaimed Boston Globe drama Spotlight came into the Globe nomination­s as the Oscar favourite.

While it took three top Globe nomination­s Thursday, including best director for McCarthy and best screenplay, its ensemble cast is failing to stand out from the pack.

After the Screen Actors Guild Awards passed over Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo on Wednesday, the Globes did, too.

Ruffalo, however, was nominated for best actor in a comedy for his performanc­e as a bipolar father in Infinitely Polar Bear.

Most of the expected contenders came away with something to show from the Globes, including the scientific space adventure The Martian (including nods for star Matt Damon and director Ridley Scott), David O. Russell’s matriarch portrait Joy ( best picture, comedy and best actress Jennifer Lawrence), George Miller’s apocalypti­c romp Mad Max: Fury Road (including best director for Miller) and Room, the Emma Donoghue novel adaptation starring Brie Larson (nominated for best actress, drama) as a captive mother.

Left largely on the outside were Steven Spielberg ’s Cold War thriller Bridge of Spies, which was only nominated for Mark Rylance’s supporting performanc­e; the Irish immigrant drama Brooklyn, just nominated for Saoirse Ronan’s leading performanc­e; and Straight Outta Compton, the popular N.W.A biopic, which landed nothing the day after the SAG Awards gave it a best ensemble nomination.

Will Smith, whose upcoming Concussion has drawn headlines for its depiction of head trauma in football, joined the best actor, drama, nominees.

Also nominated were Michael Fassbender (Steve Jobs), Eddie Redmayne (The Danish Girl), DiCaprio and Bryan Cranston (Trumbo).

Apparently displaced was Johnny Depp’s chilly Whitey Bulger in Black Mass.

Alicia Vikander, the ubiquitous star of 2015, joined the best dramatic actress field for The Danish Girl, as well as the supporting actress one for her performanc­e as an artificial intelligen­ce in the sci-fi indie Ex Machina.

Others also landed multiple nods. Rylance added a second for his TV role on the costume drama Wolf Hall.

Idris Elba also spanned both film and TV with nods for his West African rebel commander in Beasts of No Nation, as well as the British crime series Luther.

Sylvester Stallone received a best supporting actor nomination for Creed, giving him a nomination for the same character (Rocky Balboa) who first earned him a Globe nomination in 1976 for Rocky.

Ricky Gervais will return as host for the Globes on Jan. 10.

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 ?? 20TH CENTURY FOX ?? Jennifer Lawrence in a scene from Joy. Lawrence was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for best actress in a motion picture musical or comedy for her role in the film.
20TH CENTURY FOX Jennifer Lawrence in a scene from Joy. Lawrence was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for best actress in a motion picture musical or comedy for her role in the film.

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