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Ranking this year’s Golden Globe contenders for Best Motion Picture

By Eric Hughes

January 12, 2011

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I like (nay, love) that Inception got a nod, but again, I don’t see it picking up Top Globe on Sunday. A small, but possibly significant reason for this is that Avatar won last year. Yeah, it doesn’t seem right for last year’s kings to affect what wins this year, but the possibility is certainly there. Prior to Avatar, the HFP honored Slumdog Millionaire, Atonement, Babel and Brokeback Mountain. Average budget among the four? Just 21 million – or about eight times what it cost to make Inception. Were it to win, Inception would be the most expensive champion – ignoring that pesky Avatar, of course – since Titanic.

Along these lines, I think Inception is a bit too steeped in mythology to win out against some of the Globes’ more “traditional” contenders. Mythology is good – great, even – but I don’t know that it sustains against, say, periods (The King’s Speech). Inception is epic, but not in the way that The Social Network is. Inception is deep without being deep, you know? So the totem topples or it doesn’t topple – where does that leave us?

3) The Fighter
The Fighter is my least favorite of the bunch, but I feel it stands a better chance at winning Best Motion Picture than the flicks I’ve already discussed for having many of the familiar qualities that help movies like it get nominated time and time again at major award shows. At its heart, The Fighter is a family drama about one central thing, really: Discovering a line, the happy medium, between career and family (if such a line exists). If you can’t have both, then which do you favor? And if you can have both, will the result satisfy?

Christian Bale, Amy Adams and Melissa Leo, in particular, are remarkably great in the movie. Leo’s character, in fact, feels at first a bit stock – a tough, no nonsense mother you know you’ve seen before – but over time she develops her into what turned out to be my favorite part about the movie.

A surprise, though, was Wahlberg. He not only got out-acted by the people I just listed, but got the least amount of sympathy from me as well. I more enjoyed Bale, Adams and Leo, and what they brought to the movie, and kinda think he got his acting nod, too, because the other three did.




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2) The King’s Speech
Thanks to a friend who really wanted to check out how Colin Firth stacks up as an actor with a speech impediment, I completed my binge on Golden Globe-nominated movies with an early bird screening of The King’s Speech over the weekend. Firth, actually, is fantastic as King George VI. As is Geoffrey Rush, who reprises his role as Hector Barbossa from the Pirates movies. No, he plays the king’s speech therapist, and together with Firth, acted with some of the best male chemistry I’d seen all year.

The acting, though, was more thrilling for me than The King’s Speech’s story. I think where it goes wrong is it all feels rather basic. Yes, we’re dealing with Britain’s Royal family in the 1930s and ‘40s, yet the only thing the movie really builds to is, yes, the titular speech. I would’ve liked for a little more to chew on.

Personally, I don’t know how The King’s Speech ranks among my favorites of the year yet. I’ve been recommending it to those that ask, sure, but making sure to note that it’s more an actors' movie than anything else. I can see it winning the Globe – it’s that sort of movie – but I think there are a handful of other releases from 2010 that I feel more enthused about.

1) The Social Network
Perhaps you figured it out before you got down here to the bottom, but The Social Network is not only my favorite of the year – something I alluded to on Tuesday in How to Spend $20 – but the movie I think stands the best chance of winning Best Motion Picture at Sunday’s Golden Globes. Here’s what I got:

  • Jesse Eisenberg is masterful as Facebook architect Mark Zuckerberg. He plays him with just the right amounts of genius, naiveté and asshole – or, I guess, what I suspect Zuckerberg would be like in social settings.
  • As well, Justin Timberlake is a total gem. He enters the movie in a funny way, and steals just about every scene he appears in.
  • Aaron Sorkin’s script is razor sharp. It’s zippy, fun, witty and just damn entertaining. I honestly don’t remember an instance of drag. The Social Network just moves.
  • At its heart, The Social Network is great drama. If it didn’t bounce around so much, it’d work well as a theater production maybe. The changes in scenery alone make it an absurd suggestion, but alas.


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