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Posted: 4:03 a.m. Monday, Jan. 17, 2011
By DAVID GERMAIN
AP Movie Writer
BEVERLY
HILLS, Calif. (AP) -- The Facebook tale ``The Social Network'' won top
honors Sunday at the Golden Globes with four prizes, including best drama and
director, solidifying its prospects as an Academy Awards favorite.
Winning the dramatic lead-acting prizes were Colin Firth for the British
monarchy saga ``The King's Speech'' and Natalie Portman for the psychosexual
thriller ``Black Swan.''
Lead-acting honors for the Globes' musical or
comedy categories went to Annette Bening for the lesbian-family story ``The Kids
Are All Right'' and Paul Giamatti for the curmudgeon tale ``Barney's Version.''
The boxing drama ``The Fighter'' earned both supporting acting Globes,
for Christian Bale and Melissa Leo.
David Fincher, directing winner for
``The Social Network,'' said he thought it was strange when ``The Social
Network'' script came to him, since he usually makes dark character studies
about misanthropes or films about serial killers. His films include the murder
tales ``Seven'' and ``Zodiac.''
``I'm personally loath to acknowledge
the kind of wonderful response this film has received for fear of becoming
addicted to it, so suffice it to say, it's been really nice,'' said Fincher,
whose film also won the Globes for screenplay for Aaron Sorkin and musical score
for Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross.
Sorkin, creator of TV's ``The West
Wing,'' had kind words for Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, played by Jesse
Eisenberg in ``The Social Network.''
``Mark Zuckerberg, if you're
watching, Rooney Mara makes a prediction at the beginning of the movie. She was
wrong. You turned out to be a great entrepreneur, a great visionary and an
incredible altruist,'' Sorkin said.
While ``The Social Network''
dominated, it was a night with something for almost everybody, as most key films
came away with prizes. The main snub was for the sci-fi blockbuster
``Inception,'' a best-drama contender that had four nominations but lost them
all. Johnny Depp, who had two nominations for best musical or comedy actor, also
left empty-handed.
The win by Portman as a ballerina coming unhinged
amid a production of ``Swan Lake'' sets her up for a two-woman showdown for best
actress at the Feb. 27 Oscars with Bening, who won for her role as a stern
lesbian mom in ``The Kids Are All Right,'' which also was named best musical or
comedy film.
Portman thanked the film's choreographer, her fiance
Benjamin Millepied, with whom she's expecting a child. He also appears in the
movie, and his character doesn't want to sleep with hers.
``He's the
best actor! It's not true, he totally wants to sleep with me,'' Portman said,
giggling.
``Barney's Version'' follows the many loves in his life: his
three wives, played by Rachelle Lefevre, Minnie Driver and Rosamund Pike, whom
Giamatti described as ``a trifecta of hotties.''
``I got to smoke and
drink and get laid in this movie and I got paid for it. An amazing, amazing
thing,'' Giamatti said.
Bening won the musical or comedy actress prize
in a field that included ``The Kids Are All Right'' co-star Julianne Moore. The
film stars Bening and Moore as a couple whose family falls into turmoil after
their teen children seek out the sperm donor that fathered them.
``I'm
very proud to be a part of this very special film about two women who are deeply
in love and try to keep their family together,'' Bening said. ``My partner,
Julianne Moore, I have to thank first. She asked me to do the picture with her.
She made it possible for us to shoot it where we shot it, when we did, so
Julianne you are a class act, thank you.''
The buzz around town on
Globes weekend was not only about likely winners, but also about a lawsuit filed
Thursday by a former longtime publicist for the Globes claiming the organization
that runs the show, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, engages in payola
schemes for nominations and awards. The allegations have been denied by the
HFPA, a group of about 90 reporters covering show business for overseas outlets.
Ricky Gervais returned as Globes host for the second-straight year.
Gervais joked that Globe nominees weren't picked just so that Globe voters could
hang out with stars such as Depp.
``They also accepted bribes,'' Gervais
said, referring to the publicist lawsuit.
Philip Berk, who heads the
HFPA, made no reference to the lawsuit during his appearance early in the show,
simply offering a perfunctory plug for the quality of Hollywood movies.
Gervais pulled few punches as the night progressed, mocking Hugh Hefner,
Charlie Sheen, Cher, Bruce Willis, Mel Gibson, Scientologists and Robert Downey
Jr., among others.
``Aside from the fact that it's been hugely
mean-spirited, with mildly sinister undertones, I'd say the vibe of the show is
pretty good so far, wouldn't you?'' Downey, a presenter, shot back, perhaps only
half-jokingly.
Bale, who won for his role as a former boxer whose career
unraveled amid drugs and crime, thanked his collaborators on ``The Fighter,''
among them director David O. Russell and star and producer Mark Wahlberg, who
plays boxer Micky Ward to Bale's Dicky Eklund, Ward's older half brother.
``I've really got to give a shout out to Mark, because he drove this
whole movie, and you can only give a loud performance like the one I gave when
you have a quiet anchor and a stoic character,'' Bale said. ``I've played that
one many times, and it never gets any notice.''
Bale seems to be on the
same awards track as his ``Batman'' co-star, the late Heath Ledger, was two
years ago, when he won supporting actor at the Globes for ``The Dark Knight'' on
the way to earning a posthumous Oscar.
Leo, who plays the domineering
mother of Ward and Eklund, had gushing words for all of her co-stars along with
her own mother and other ancestors.
``Here in Southern California, home
of my mother, her mother, her mother before her look Mom, I got a Golden
Globe!'' Leo said. ``Mark Wahlberg, you are a prince, you are amazing. It was so
beautiful to play your mother.''
``Toy Story 3,'' the top-grossing film
released last year and the second sequel to 1995's digital animation pioneer
``Toy Story,'' won the Globe for animated films, making Disney's Pixar Animation
unit five-for-five in the category since it was added in 2006. Past Pixar
winners are ``Up,'' ``WALL-E,'' ``Ratatouille'' and ``Cars.''
``Wow,
were you two even born when the first `Toy Story' came out?'' ``Toy Story 3''
director Lee Unkrich said to his award's presenters, 16-year-old pop star Justin
Bieber and 14-year-old Hailee Steinfeld, co-star of the hit Western ``True
Grit.''
Robert De Niro received the Cecil B. DeMille Award for career
achievement.
The usually taciturn De Niro gave an uncharacteristically
interesting acceptance speech, making jokes about members of the HFPA being
deported (along with most of the waiters working the event) and suggesting that
most people in the room hadn't seen a lot of the films he was proud of,
including ``Stone,'' ``Marvin's Room'' and ``Stanley and Iris.''
``Some
of you would be seeing them for the first time. You didn't even watch the
screeners, did you?'' De Niro said.
Among TV winners, ``Glee'' won three
prizes, best comedy and supporting-acting prizes for Jane Lynch and Chris
Colfer. ``Boardwalk Empire'' won two prizes, for best drama and dramatic actor
for Steve Buscemi.
The Globe ceremony traditionally had a strong track
record as a forecast for what film would win best picture at the Oscars. But the
two shows have split in recent times, with only one top Globe recipient 2008's
``Slumdog Millionaire'' also winning the main prize at the Oscars over the past
six years.
A year ago, the sci-fi sensation ``Avatar'' won best drama at
the Globes, but the Iraq War saga ``The Hurt Locker'' took best picture at the
Oscars.
Beth Harris and Christy Lemire contributed to this
report.
Online:
http://www.goldenglobes.org
(Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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