The nominations for the 2013 Golden Globes have been announced.
Best Motion Picture (Drama)
Argo
Django Unchained
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Zero Dark Thirty
Best Motion Picture (Comedy or Musical)
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Les Miserables
Moonrise Kingdom
Salmon Fishing in the Yemen
Silver Linings Playbook
Best Director
Ben Affleck – Argo
Kathryn Bigelow – Zero Dark Thirty
Ang Lee – Life of Pi
Steven Spielberg – Lincoln
Quentin Tarantino – Django Unchained
Best Actor in a Motion Picture (Drama)
Daniel Day-Lewis – Lincoln
Richard Gere – Arbitrage
John Hawkes – The Sessions
Joaquin Phoenix – The Master
Denzel Washington – Flight
Best Actress in a Motion Picture (Drama)
Jessica Chastain – Zero Dark Thirty
Marion Cotillard – Rust and Bone
Helen Mirren – Hitchcock
Naomi Watts – The Impossible
Rachel Weisz – The Deep Blue Sea
Best Actor in a Motion Picture (Comedy or Musical)
Jack Black – Bernie
Bradley Cooper – Silver Linings Playbook
Hugh Jackman – Les Miserables
Ewan McGregor – Salmon Fishing in the Yemen
Bill Murray – Hyde Park on Hudson
Best Actress in a Motion Picture (Comedy or Musical)
Emily Blunt – Salmon Fishing in the Yemen
Judi Dench – The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Jennifer Lawrence – Silver Linings Playbook
Maggie Smith – Quartet
Meryl Streep – Hope Springs
Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture
Alan Arkin – Argo
Leonardo DiCaprio – Django Unchained
Philip Seymour Hoffman – The Master
Tommy Lee Jones – Lincoln
Christoph Waltz – Django Unchained
Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture
Amy Adams – The Master
Sally Field – Lincoln
Anne Hathaway – Les Miserables
Helen Hunt – The Sessions
Nicole Kidman – The Paperboy
Best Animated Film
Brave
Frankenweenie
Hotel Transylvania
Rise of the Guardians
Wreck-It Ralph
Best Screenplay for a Motion Picture
Argo
Django Unchained
Lincoln
Silver Linings Playbook
Zero Dark Thirty
Best Score for a Motion Picture
Anna Karenina
Argo
Cloud Atlas
Life of Pi
Lincoln
Best Original Song
"For You" from Act of Valor
"Not Running Anymore" from Stand Up Guys
"Safe and Sound" from The Hunger Games
"Skyfall" from Skyfall
"Suddenly" from Les Miserables
Best TV Series (Drama)
Breaking Bad
Boardwalk Empire
Downton Abbey
Homeland
The Newsroom
Best TV Series (Comedy)
Big Bang Theory
Episodes
Girls
Modern Family
Smash
Best Actor in a Drama Series
Steve Buscemi – Boardwalk Empire
Bryan Cranston – Breaking Bad
Jeff Daniels – The Newsroom
Jon Hamm – Mad Men
Damien Lewis – Homeland
Best Actress in a Drama Series
Connie Britton – Nashville
Glenn Close – Damages
Claire Danes – Homeland
Michelle Dockery – Downton Abbey
Julianna Margulies – The Good Wife
Best Actor in a Comedy Series
Alec Baldwin – 30 Rock
Don Cheadle – House of Lies
Matt LeBlanc – Episodes
Louis C.K. – Louie
Jim Parsons – The Big Bang Theory
Best Actress in a Comedy Series
Zooey Deschanel – New Girl
Julia Louis-Dreyfus – Veep
Lena Dunham – Girls
Tina Fey – 30 Rock
Amy Poehler – Parks and Recreation
Best Miniseries or TV Movie
Game Change
The Girl
Hatfields & McCoys
The Hour
Political Animals
Best Actor in a Miniseries or TV Movie
Kevin Costner – Hatfields & McCoys
Benedict Cumberbatch – Lincoln
Woody Harrelson – Game Change
Toby Jones – The Girl
Clive Owen – Hemingway and Gelhorn
Best Actress in a Miniseries or TV Movie
Nicole Kidman – Hemingway and Gelhorn
Jessica Lange – American Horror Story: Asylum
Sienna Miller – The Girl
Julianne Moore – Game Change
Sigourney Weaver – Political Animals
Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Miniseries, or TV Movie
Max Greenfield – New Girl
Ed Harris – Game Change
Danny Huston – Magic City
Mandy Patinkin – Homeland
Eric Stonestreet – Modern Family
Best Supporting Actress in Series, Miniseries, or TV Movie
Hayden Panetierre – Nashville
Archie Panjabi – The Good Wife
Sarah Paulson – Game Change
Maggie Smith – Downton Abbey
Sofia Vergara – Modern Family
no best movie, director or screenplay for The Master.
guess its business as usual at the golden flops.
Joaquin should be getting Best actor, but they'll probably give it to someone else that is not as deserving... as always.
I wanna see Dicaprio get best supporting actor. It's either him or Hoffman.
Anne Hathaway for Best supporting actress and Jessica Chastain for Best Actress.
Aside from those 4 awards, I don't really care.
ya what a shit list.
Not a single Premium Rush nomination. What is this bullshit?!?
Golden Globes: Tim Goodman on TV's 'Woeful' Nominations (Opinion)
Source: THR
"Mad Men" madness, "Smash" beats out real comedies -- oh, dear Lord. Golden Globes, what have you done?
It's one thing to await the Golden Globe nominations with a mix of curiosity -- will it combine some of its yearly odd picks with daring picks as well? -- and also that nervous feeling of wondering exactly how embarrassing some of the picks will be. It's quite another to wake up to find the Globes voters have completely lost their minds.
No Mad Men nomination in drama? Smash – as a reminder, it's a musical drama – in the comedy category? Wow. Just ... wow.
Now, normally that Smash craziness would make someone's day, someone who might be super cynical about a show like that (ahem), because it's as if the Globes are making the joke for you. It's effortless.
But really, this time the joke isn't funny anymore. It's on the Globes, and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association apparently doesn't get it. The Emmys have nothing to fear from the Globes, and the Globes are in no way an early indicator of what will succeed at the Emmys. No, given Thursday's announcements, when it comes to television the Globes are about as accurate and important as the SAG Awards. And that's a level of failure that's hard to grasp.
In the span of two days, two awards shows have shown they know almost nothing about television. Worse, the nominations aren't just off-brand or quirky, they're embarrassing and show a complete lack of respect for the medium. You know, the most powerful medium on the planet. Yeah, that one.
It would be easy (and yes, it's important) to fly into a rant about how the Golden Globes and SAG Awards need to restructure their categories to better represent television. For example, it's nice that the Globes at least acknowledge supporting actors, but when it does so by tossing them in with supporting actors in miniseries and TV movies as well, what you get is Max Greenfield, so funny in Fox's New Girl, going up against Mandy Patinkin, so serious in Showtime's Homeland. (That's so wrongheaded, funny and sad that it just makes any sane person drop to the ground.) But no, a thorough lashing -- er, helpful analysis -- of both organizations' category woes will be left for another time, another column.
Because how can anyone make sense of what the Globes did Thursday? I never thought I'd say this, but it's at least partly understandable that Showtime's Nurse Jackie, a dramedy, gets tossed into the comedy category too easily and wrongly. But at least -- gah -- there are supposed to be funny elements to it. The only funny thing about Smash is how bad it is and how earnest it is in that business of badness. But a comedy? Nope.
And did the Globe voters decide to punish Matthew Weiner or something? Not nominating Mad Men in the drama category is more than just unfathomable, it's embarrassing. Put the Smash and Mad Men issues together, and the message to the world is: "We give up. We're out of darts to throw."
As for best dramas, on the one hand, you want to tell Globes voters congratulations for finally nominating AMC's Breaking Bad, after a full four seasons of brilliance have gone by. Better late than never. But HBO's The Newsroom? Seriously? At the expense of Mad Men, HBO's Game of Thrones, AMC's The Walking Dead or FX's Justified and Sons of Anarchy?
Dear Santa, remember when I asked you to please get SAG voters a television for Christmas? Yeah, you'll need to double up on that wish.
In fact, the only nomination for Mad Men was Jon Hamm for lead actor. It's like there are no actresses on the show.
Last year the Globes at least acknowledged that Kelsey Grammer gave the best acting performance on television, so snubbing him this year for his work in Starz's Boss seems less grievous. It allows Jeff Daniels into the mix, and for the record, his work on The Newsroom is the best thing about the show. Not to ring the same bell I did Wednesday with the SAGs, but maybe a little category expansion is both worthwhile and necessary amid this ongoing television renaissance. The Emmys did it.
(Oh, and how must the Emmy folks be gloating this morning? Back-to-back displays from competing awards shows that prove they have nothing to worry about. The disrespect for TV by others is no doubt noted at the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.)
While it's no surprise to see ABC's Modern Family and CBS' The Big Bang Theory in the comedy category, HBO's Girls is a nice (and necessary) addition. But this Globes obsession with Showtime's Episodes -- a fine and funny series, just not anywhere near a top five comedy -- really has to end. By including it for a second season and coupling it with the Smash debacle, not only does FX's Louie go criminally ignored yet again, but so does NBC's 30 Rock and Parks and Recreation, Fox's Raising Hope, FX's It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia and Archer, Showtime's House of Lies, HBO's Veep and -- well, the list goes on and on.
I would plead for the Globes to admit that Smash was a mistake, but my fear is that they'd then stick it in the drama category and remove Breaking Bad. That's precisely how untrustworthy the HFPA is when it comes to good judgment (and taste).
Oh, and Aaron Paul, people? Where is Aaron Paul? You watched Breaking Bad, it seems. The guy next to Bryan Cranston a lot of the time? That guy should be nominated.
There's a tiny fraction of make-up goodness in the nominations: Louis C.K. (Louie) and Don Cheadle (House of Lies) in the actor in a comedy category. But really, the damage is already too great to undo.
I will, however, take great pleasure in wondering who will win supporting actress, as Hayden Panettiere (ABC's Nashville) and Sofia Vergara (Modern Family) go up against, um, Downton Abbey's Maggie Smith. PBS will take that challenge every year. Oh, I forgot. That category rant is a separate column.
Until then, here's the thought I spoke out loud when looking at the nominations Thursday morning: "You can't be serious?" And when it comes to the Golden Globes, it's now more true than ever that they're not.
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The complete list of winners at the 2013 Golden Globes:
Best Motion Picture, Comedy
*Les Miserables
Best Motion Picture, Drama
*Argo
Best Director, Motion Picture
*Ben Affleck, Argo
Best Actor in a Motion Picture, Drama
*Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln
Best Actress in a Motion Picture, Drama
*Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty
Best Actor in a Motion Picture, Comedy or Musical
*Hugh Jackman, Les Miserables
Best Actress in a Motion Picture, Comedy or Musical
*Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook
Best Foreign Language Film
*Amour (Austria)
Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture
*Anne Hathaway, Les Miserables
Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture
*Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained
Best TV Series, Comedy
*Girls
Best TV Series, Drama
*Homeland
Best TV Movie or Miniseries
*Game Change
Best Performance by an Actress in a TV series, Drama
*Claire Danes, Homeland
Best Performance by an Actor in a TV Series, Drama
*Damian Lewis, Homeland
Best Performance by an Actress in a TV Series, Comedy
*Lena Dunham, Girls
Best Performance by an Actor in a TV Series, Comedy
*Don Cheadle, House of Lies
Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or TV Movie
*Kevin Costner, Hatfields and McCoys
Best Performance by an Actress in a Miniseries or TV Movie
*Julianne Moore, Game Change
Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries or TV Movie
*Maggie Smith, Downton Abbey
Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Miniseries or TV Movie
*Ed Harris, Game Change
Best Animated Film
*Brave
Best Screenplay for a Motion Picture
*Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino)
Best Score for a Motion Picture
*Life of Pi (Mychael Danna)
Best Original Song, Motion Picture
*"Skyfall" - Skyfall
OH GOD SO BORING
well, at least Ben Affleck recognized PTA....
it's around 1.36