LOS ANGELES, Jan. 15 (Xinhua) -- Moving drama
"Babel" won the best picture award at the 64th Golden Globes ceremony here
Monday night, with its strongest contender "Dreamgirls" winning three major
awards.
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Jennifer Hudson holds her award for best
supporting actress in a musical or comedy for her role in "Dreamgirls"
while backstage at the 64th annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills,
California Jan. 15, 2007. (Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery
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Veteran
director Martin Scorsese picked the best director for his crime thriller "The
Departed."
"Babel," directed by Mexican director Alejandro
Gonzalez Inarritu, led all nominees into the ceremony. It won only one, which
was also the biggest prize.
"It took us more than one year doing this film,
shooting it on three continents and in five languages, and it seems no matter
how many languages you shoot a film ... the power of cinema is universal," said
Inarritu when receiving the trophy from California governor and former action
star Arnold Schwarzenegger.
The movie described immigration problems among four
families between the United States and Mexico after the "9.11" terrorism attack.
"Dreamgirls," an upbeat musical about the rise of a
1960s soul trio loosely based on The Supremes, gained three important awards,
including the best musical picture, the best supporting actor and actress awards
for Eddie Murphy and Jennifer Hudson. It now seems a certainty to earn an Oscar
nod when the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science unveils its best picture
nominations on January 23.
Legendary Martin Scorsese picked up the best director
award for his criminal film "The Departed," after his victory for "Gangs of New
York" four years ago.
British actress Helen Mirren also had a big night,
taking home two best actress Golden Globes -- one for her role as the queen of
England in the HBO miniseries "Elizabeth I" and the other for her dramatic film
role as Queen Elizabeth II in "The Queen."
Meanwhile, Forest Whitaker was named best actor for
his portrayal of Ugandan dictator Idi Amin in "The Last King of Scotland."
Meryl Streep won her sixth Golden Globe, winning the
prize for best actress in the category of musical or comedy motion picture in
the film "The Devil Wears Prada," while Sacha Baron Cohen won the best actor in
the same category for his black humor film "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America
for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan."
Leonardo Di Caprio and Clint Eastwood went into the
ceremony as the first actor and director, respectively, with two nominations in
the same category. But both were passed over.
DiCaprio was nominated for best actor for "Blood
Diamond" and "The Departed," but lost to Whitaker, while Eastwood had
nominations for directing "Flags of Our Fathers" and "Letters from Iwo Jima,"
but Martin Scorsese won the directing prize for "The Departed."
Eastwood did not come away empty-handed as his
"Letters from Iwo Jima" -- a film about the famed World War II battle from the
Japanese perspective -- won the Golden Globe for best foreign-language film,
beating out Mel Gibson's "Apocalypto," "The Lives of Others" from Germany,
"Pan's Labyrinth" from Mexico and "Volver" from Spain.
"Cars" took home the first Golden Globe awarded to an
animated film, beating out "Monster House" and the recent box office blockbuster
"Happy Feet."
Hollywood veteran Warren Beatty was presented with
the Cecil B.De Mille Award for lifetime achievement during the ceremony. The
award put the 69-year-old Beatty in the company of former recipients such as
Anthony Hopkins, Al Pacino and Jack Nicholson.
Since the 1963 adoption of the current format of
separate best picture winners for drama and musicals or comedy, 70 percent of
the films that ended up with best picture Academy Awards, the Oscar, had first
received a Golden Globe.
Last year, acting Oscar winners Reese Witherspoon,
Philip Seymour Hoffman, Rachel Weisz and George Clooney all won Golden Globes
before stepping into the Oscar Awards history.
However, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association,
which gives the awards, has drawn criticism for its small size of 85 members,
which theoretically makes it more susceptible to influence by studios and
publicists, the absence of members from internationally renowned publications,
and the practice of some members of posing for photographs with stars, which
would be an ethics breach at most U.S. publications.
Related:
"Borat," "The Queen," odd couple at Golden
Globes
BEIJING, Jan. 16 -- British actress Helen Mirren, who
knows how to play a queen, and British actor Sacha Baron Cohen, who is a prince
at playing boors, may dominate Monday's 64th annual Golden Globe awards -- an
event that likes to think of itself as a precursor to the Oscars.
Spielberg, Hanks among award presenters at Golden
Globes
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) -- Director Steven
Spielberg and actor Tom Hanks are among the nearly 50 celebrities lined up to
present awards on Monday, when the 64th Golden Globe Awards ceremony is held at
the Beverly Hilton hotel, organizers here said.