Saturday, January 30, 2016

Live-Blogging the 2016 SAG Awards

9:00pm: Demi nabs one more camera moment to send everyone home. Beneath the credits, Tom Hooper is standing way too close to Julianne Moore and trying to spread his toxic fumes onto her. Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman are borderline making out as they stand up from their chairs, so some things are still exactly as they should be.

8:59pm: Big cheers for Compton while Demi recites, but the winner is—after Demi Moore's significant struggles with the envelope—the cast of Spotlight. I sorta think Tom McCarthy just reached over and victory-patted one of his actors on the butt, but I couldn't tell if it was Crudup or McAdams. Ruffalo winds up as ambassador. The Spotlight cast looks truly surprised and truly overjoyed. Keaton, Crudup, Slattery, and Schreiber all project granite, serious manface, so the camera crew decides to frame Ruffalo against the smilier D'Arcy James and McAdams. Ruffalo passes the SAG baton to Keaton, who says, "This is really for the disenfranchised everywhere... This is for every Flint, Michigan everywhere... This is for the powerless - and you can hang me for that if you want to, I really don't care." Nobody in this room is gonna hang him for that. Certainly not Sunrise Coigney, still the partner and audience member most prone to being emotionally overcome, for which I adore her.

8:58pm: BEST ENSEMBLE (Beasts, Big Short, Spotlight, Compton, Trumbo hahaha) - I still think Spotlight will take this, but if Big Short surprises, that might be all she wrote for the Oscar race. Certainly Spotlight would get my vote, with Compton its only close competitor, and not even that close.

8:57pm: Demi. Just hilarious.

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Sunday, January 10, 2016

Live-Blogging the 2015 Golden Globes

10:01: "That's it. Sorry, we're out of time." That's Ricky Gervais from offscreen somewhere. Then follows it up with "From Mel Gibson and myself, 'Shalom.'" Hope you've all survived this live-blog. If you found it trying, frivolous, and repetitive, go put things in perspective. Sleep outside, inside an animal.

10:00: It's The Revenant, notwithstanding that The Revenant is terrible. So rather than focus too much on this, can we just have a moment here?  Iñárritu. Those diacritics over the letters are your best friends. They tell you just what to do. Iñ-Á-rritu. If we're going to have to go through this again in a month, which I'm not convinced will be necessary but suddenly looks more likely than it did a few hours ago, just practice!

9:59: BEST PICTURE (DRAMA):
Prediction: Spotlight. I thought so before the party started, and I still think so, since the Globes are no stranger to the Best Picture-with-no-other-wins thing. Even if The Revenant came out pretty strong tonight.
Preference: Carol, by miles, though I'd be happy with Mad Max or the Globe crowd. The Boston Globe.
Harrison Ford, who has lived another evening without offing himself  from sheer disgust at his vocation and its attendant frou-fra, is here to present it.

9:57: Seriously, though. "From The Hunger Games, Julianne Moore?" That's so messed up.

9:54 BEST ACTOR (DRAMA):
Prediction: Leonardo DiBisonLiver
Preference: A total and complete recall. I'd tick Fassbender's box (that is not a euphemism, I am not horrifying) but I'd be closing my eyes and thinking about Macbeth while I did it.
Of course Leonardo DiCaprio wins it, and everyone stands up and applauds, because he's the only nominated actor who literally died while making his movie. He does speak with eloquence, and not exactly his fault that his full-throated tribute to First Nations people and their lands doesn't sit all that well with the exoticizing and somewhat hoary depiction of them in the movie. You really get the feeling that people in that room have heard even worse stories than the rest of us have about how awful it got on that set. I assume DiCaprio's in a tricky position and he brings his speech off with class, even if I'm so over the whole thing. The only bit that amazes me is that Kate Winslet isn't crying. She's as steely and focused as Jacob Tremblay was during Brie's. Everybody must be too tired for euphoria.

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Sunday, January 11, 2015

Liveblogging the 2014 Golden Globes

10:02: I'm a ridiculous person, but thanks to everyone who read along.  And it's never too late to comment, or to read about some of my favorites of the year, or to learn about 120-year old movies, or to count down till the Top 10 list next weekend. Keep coming back! 

10:00: And BEST PICTURE (DRAMA) goes to a movie Meryl has re-christened Boyhoooood. The Ellar-Lorelei-Ethan-Patricia family is having the best time up there.  They feel like a family!  (But Patricia is clearly being pierced by her whalebone corset.  It's a new century, girl! We have Spanx now, and Tadashi Shoji! No need to go full Edith Wharton if it's hurting you. Or just let it hang out! What I'm saying is, the pain isn't worth it.)

9:59: Imitation Game's won nothing, right? I'm really asking.  Even though it seems like I'm just rubbing it in.

9:58: Only in this immediate context, I feel a bit sorry for this American Sniper ad.

9:57: And I assume it's going to be Boyhood? But it could be any of them, kind of, Foxcatcher aside? Right?

9:56: FOR ONCE, Meryl is going to present Best Picture!  Hasn't that literally never happened?

9:54: When Eddie Redmayne wins BEST ACTOR (DRAMA), his fellow nominees all get visibly misty-eyed, especially Gyllenhaal and Oyelowo, but whether they're sad about losing or inspired by him or just tired past their wits or 45% constituted of champagne, it's all impossible to say.

9:53: I don't know who Benedict and Keira brought with them as their dates to this thing but they don't even stand for Julianne Moore winning BEST ACTRESS (DRAMA) and one of them checked her phone while Julianne walked up there, so as far as I'm concerned they are beasts and should be outside getting trained or even walked.

9:50: "When your producers tell you you're running long, there's only one thing to do. Ladies and gentlemen, Matthew McConaughey." The joke has no time to ripple, because McConaughey immediately starts doing this weird Yoknapatawpha thing with his voice, and everyone is uncomfortable. And by that, I mean I am.

9:48: What've we got left? Julianne and the Actor and Picture (Drama) prizes? Am I forgetting anything? Did Modern Family already win?

9:44: Robert Downey, Jr., presenting BEST PICTURE (MUSICAL/COMEDY) to something that sh... Whoa!!! It's The Grand Budapest Hotel!! Wes had to put down his glue stick and plastic scissors so fast in order to get up there!  Not too many powerful or actual women on that stage with him, but he at least gets more laugh than any scripted "funny bit" all night. (Well, at least since the Amal Alamuddin joke, which remains the night's clear peak.)

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Sunday, January 12, 2014

Live-Blogging the 2013 Golden Globes

10:00 Good night, everybody!  Fey and Poehler called their ceremony "the beautiful mess they hoped it would be."  It didn't feel that beautiful to me, and I'm curious if it's quite what they wanted; they sure do make themselves scarce as the ceremonies wear on.  On top of what I just wrote, I'm most happy for Alfonso Cuarón, Spike Jonze, Amy Adams, and the Frozen filmmakers. And, sight unseen, for Cranston, Wright, Moss, and Poehler.

9:59 A barely-awake Johnny Depp did what needed to be done and bestowed upon 12 Years a Slave its rightful prize.  I know I just said how much I love another nominee and how much I like a third one (Philomena and Rush feel like non-entities, especially the latter, and not only in awards terms.) Still, Slave feels to me like their unambiguous superior, even if you're treating creative achievement separately from thematic and contextual importance.  I'm delighted for the team who got to accept the top prize, and thank goodness for Onstage MVP Sarah Paulson, feeding a nervous McQueen some necessary names, particularly Sean Bobbitt's and Dede Gardner's.

But I mentioned Atonement before, and as befell that so-called front-runner after the Globes, I'm worried that 12 Years comes out of the evening feeling like a loser even though it won.  Oh, well. Makes the Oscar predicting game more interesting, I guess!  And the prize will still sit on the right mantel.

9:56  BEST PICTURE (DRAMA)
I'm Rooting For: 12 Years a Slave, but Gravity is nearly as superb. Captain Phillips, while not on the same level as those two, is an easy contender to feel good about.
I'm Predicting: 12 Years a Slave, in an Atonement-esque situation of taking the top prize even after looking quite weak all night.

9:53 Anyway (sorry, for the see-sawing), I really liked Dallas Buyers Club and haven't felt too persuaded by any of the recent takedowns and ideological critiques of its standpoint and historical revisionism.  But McConaughey and Leto have made it harder tonight to feel settled in my affection for the film, through their discomfiting representations of the movie and of themselves. Again, they weren't awful, exactly. But they whiffed on the opportunity to be more ambassadorial for the film, or to reassure anyone who feels uneasy with their involvements and perspectives, or the politics of the film. Didn't help that neither said "AIDS," "HIV," or anything less euphemistic than "all the Rayons"; I'm sure they spoke from the heart, but they seemed a little trapped in the kinds of cautious euphemisms and silences that their characters explicitly suffered under.

9:52 Okay, so Blanchett.  I mean, don't get me wrong, she was totally poised and everything, and took inspiration from the HFPA and blended Comedy and Drama in a barely distinguishable combo.  That was cool, but also made me a little dizzy; I might have preferred a speech that was more obviously silly or sincere.  Anyway, it was definitely a post-vodka, late-in-the-evening toss-off.  We have more to look forward to from future speeches.  But she did say that Dianne Wiest was her all-time inspiration as an actress, and that is Everything.  Please, newspaper editors, make that your headline.

9:50 Matthew McConaughey's speech isn't landing that well, partly because of McConaughey'isms, and partly because he's pitching it a little too hard.  And he's sounding a little... unreconstructed.  The 12 Years a Slave table is having an awfully hard time not looking dismayed by their total shutout so far.

9:48 BEST ACTOR (DRAMA)
I'm Rooting For: McConaughey, but much like Wilson Phillips, you won't see me cry (cry... cry...) if Ejiofor or maybe Redford pops up there.
I'm Predicting: And I'm thinking Redford might. I was thinking that even before 12 Years started striking out all night.

9:46 Cate extemporizes quite well. Pretty well.  Honestly, it gets a little weird at times.  But hold on, before I can say more.

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Live-Blogging the 2012 Academy Awards

11:02: Did I just say Ben Affleck gave the speech of the night? I briefly forgot about Daniel Day-Lewis. I promise to never do that again. Good night again, everybody!

11:01: This song for all the losers is really getting Emmanuelle through this difficult moment. And whatever Kristin's been product-placed here for all night, it feels well and duly advertised.  Good night, everybody!  Are you a loser? Here's to the Losers!

11:00: Ben Affleck wins speech of the night, right? I don't care how rehearsed, sincere, or rehearsed-sincere it is (and it reads as pretty damn sincere to me).  It's wonderful.  Maybe not what I'd dream of if I were his wife "working on their marriage, and it is hard work." But otherwise? Lovely.

10:57: Grant Heslov, between Ben Affleck and George Clooney: "I know what you're thinking: 'Three Sexiest Producers Alive.'"

10:56: Michelle gives it to Argo.

10:55: Pecking order in the audience: John Travolta sits in front of Justin Theroux, who gets a better seat than Harvey Weinstein. Octavia Spencer is in front of Annapurna Pictures empress Megan Ellison and next to some cute guy. Octavia's always got a cute guy at hand.

10:54: Michelle Obama!  If the First Lady presents Best Picture, does that count as crossing the boundary between Church and State?

10:53: Jack Nicholson didn't want to die with Crash as the last Best Picture he announced.

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Live-Blogging the 2012 Golden Globes

As events played out, the most recent entries appeared on the top of the page, so readers could simply hit Reload and see the newest stuff. This is also the easiest way for me to write and publish. Now, for clarity, I've switched the order, so that you can follow the whole transcript from chronological beginning to end.



4:00pm: What if you were a hostage in post-Shah Iran, and even though the Canadian ambassador had provided you with a 70s-model television in the semi-plush living room where you had been sequestered, you were failing in every effort to get a reliable transmission of the Golden Globes? What you would do, I think, is ask your bearded friend Ben Affleck to sneak you some circuit boards and vacuum tubes to make a homemade computer, then ask his bearded friend Al Gore to invent the internet, and then log on right here at Nick's Flick Picks for our fifth annual(ish) Live-Blog of Hollywood's most sozzled, celebrity-packed awards ceremony! Everything would work out terrifically for you!

I'll be here as of 5:30pm CST————that's 6:30pm if you're attending a Khaki Scout camp in New England, and 3:30pm if you're scheduling around a Bay Area sex-surrogate appointment with Helen Hunt, and 4:30am if you're salmon fishing in the Yemen. We'll start, as usual, by listening to this year's nominated Original Songs. Which will determine in turn how early we need to drink. In the meantime, feel free to revisit one of my previous live-blogs from the 2011, 2010, or 2008 ceremonies, or even the nightmarish, Billy & Nancy non-ceremony from 2007.  Toodle-oo, see you in a few, etc.

The Red Carpet...

5:05: Okay, this is earlier than I said I'd be around, but already: Amy Adams seems to be wearing the nude, form-fitting scaffold that would go under a dress, but possibly not an actual dress. Tiny tulle frou-fra at the bottom. Claire Danes in bedroom hair and scarlet va-voom, Mayim Bialik in Grandma Couture, and Nicole Richie taking her annual opportunity to compliment the red-carpet interviews on whatever they're wearing. And I do mean whatever.

5:19: Emily Mortimer is here in some spun, draped form of chainmail, not totally selling me on its high comfort factor.  "I think it's rare for a new show to get nominated," Emily enthuses.  Remarkable chutzpah on her part, or just Globes naïveté?

5:24: Shawn What's-Her-Name just did a whole featurette about picking her favorite of three dresses from a "legendary" Hollywood dress warehouse.  She ooh'd and ah'd over all three of their bests, and then finessed the fact that she showed up in none of them.

5:28: There's Uggie from last year! Remember him? Think he'll be back this year? Think he's still living?

5:32: Okay, let's start learning something about the Best Original Song nominees. We'll start with Keith Urban's song from Act of Valor, which I gather was like Zero Dark Thirty without the budget, the controversy, or the artistic chops.  Let's hear it, Keith!

5:33: (Not that I don't absolutely apologize to Debra Messing for muting her so that I can hear this...)

5:35: This movie is definitely about soldiers or surfers. Possibly both?  Lots of sandstorm action, but even they cannot suppress the power of the lens flare. 

5:38: I like Keith Urban, but I'm guessing that, once he's safely ensconced in his famous-person front-row seat, the HFPA will decide they're eager for a song about something other than Americans taking bullets abroad.  Let's hear Taylor Swift's song from The Hunger Games, a tune I only remember disliking in the abstract.  (Jodie Foster, meanwhile, manages to twist the knife at the NBC Lady who somehow missed the memo that she always wears Armani. "Well, when I want to look beautiful I do.  When I want to be ugly, I wear something else.")

5:41: I don't know—sounds a little breathy and delicate for an intemperate ass-kicker like Katniss? Taylor in the video is dressed like a blonde spin on your standard J-horror dead-girl with unfinished business on the mortal coil. You know, one of those J-horror movies that's set in an Appalachian forest.

5:43: This song has an "Ain True Love" vibe I could get behind if it actually seemed to suit The Hunger Games.  Meanwhile, there's a Microwavable Hot Fudge Brownie ad on my muted television, and that doesn't suit The Hunger Games that well, either.  So, it's contagious.

5:45: Glenn Close: "I would do another television series, but it would have to be something really unexpected."  What I hear in that is, "I would prefer to not play anoooother psychotic ball-breaker, thanks."

5:47: Let's be misérable together! Again! Because once was certainly not enough.

5:49: I have to say, I can understand the composers' temptation to speak nearly continuously over the song.

5:50: The song is not as irritating as it is in the context of its visually stultifying presentation in the film, trapped inside a moving coach. Still, the one thing the song is meant to accomplish, to add to the nomination tally to reinforce the bond between Jean Valjean and young Cosette, still felt totally abstract to me by the end of the film, so it's hard to credit the song with accomplishing much. And with that: Bon Jovi.

5:55: (For those of you keeping up at home, this Jon Bon Jovi song is from Stand Up Guys, the Pacino-Walken-Arkin vehicle that opened the Chicago Film Festival this year and also opened ... somewhere else? Maybe? No? Hadn't heard a peep since.)

5:58: Not half bad! I mean, not great. But JBJ at least sounds in character with the movie (i.e., a lot older and more grizzled than he actually is), and the song tells enough of the story it needs to.  I mean, I have already forgotten three quarters of it. But the bar to clear in Best Original Song has often been lower than that.

6:01: There's Bradley Cooper, with his perfect hair and his own personal lens-flare in the sky. On playing Pat in Silver Linings: "I learned a lot from the character in a way I had never done before." Well, what if he'd dug a little deeper in Case 39? A missed opportunity, surely. But now it's all water under the bridge.

6:03: Did you guys know Adele recorded a song for Skyfall?

6:05: (Adele is currently drowning out Jack Black, whom I found surface-bound, silly, and wholly inadequate in Bernie. So, fine by me.)

6:07: (Adele is currently on pause for Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban, because I'm not an idiot. I'm pretty sure they win Hollywood Couple I'd Most Love To Get Burgers With, so respect is due.  She looks fantastic in black-and-gold Marchesa. Look it up. Camera pans down to their ankles, and though I'm not 100% positive, I see strong evidence of high-ish heels in Keith's dress shoes.)

6:11: So my thing with "Skyfall" is that I think the lyric of the chorus is so insipid that I'm frankly not that big a fan.  I'm not sure the lyric as a whole does a lot for the movie.  You can imagine Adele and Paul writing it without having even read a script.  But as idiomatic homage to the Bond songbook, I can admit now, after months of resisting, that it's pretty grand.  Don't get me wrong: at this particular point in the planet's history, I'm pretty sure Adele could have just covered Cathy Dennis's "Too Many Walls," submitted it to the Broccoli people, and still have scored a Globe, an Oscar, and a Top 10 hit. But "Skyfall"'s a bit more deserving than I had felt up till now.

6:15: Jimmy Fallon on the red carpet, who'd be a great host.  Remember his hilarious 10 seconds of Mick Jaggering last year?  But we're already anticipating two great hosts tonight, so we do not complain.

6:16: Al Roker to Zooey Deschanel: "Are you surprised at the way the show has taken off?"  I love this perennial question.  Isn't it amazing that no one has ever said, "Yeah, I sort of thought it was bullcrap, but boy are people swallowing it!"  I mean, not even Jessica Lange has come out and actually said that.

6:17: Amy Poehler in a blouse-less tuxedo and Vertigo-certified Carlotta Valdes hair. She and Tina are going to be great.  They're recommending a drink if: anyone cries, or "if a boob falls out of a dress" (Tina), or "if, you know, you've just had a hard week" (Amy).

6:18: Oh, you guys.  A blonde-ish Emily Blunt is this year's victim of the unflattering cutouts.  She seems to be going for a Princess Jasmine thing.  Please tell me this is not some kind of misguided homage to some horribly distorted idea of Yemen.  I'm ...surprised by all this, but Emily, by all means keep yourself entertained.

6:20: Jennifer Lawrence on being Tiffany in Silver Linings: "She's just a beautiful character, and it was an honor to play her." Has J-Law taken one of Drew Barrymore's How To Be An Innocuous Sunflower classes? It was an honor to play Tiffany?  I mean, by all —

6:21: WAIT. Lauer/Hathaway rematch. I hope she has a shiv in her little clutch.

6:22: The long, slender clutch is actually the exact right shape to hold a shiv, but Anne the Magnanimous lets Lauer live.  Thanks a lot, Anne.  But not before telling us that her mom, after watching Les Mis, said "Yours is my favorite Fantine."  And Anne thought that was "amazing" because "hers is mine."

I mean, I know. I am, in general, pro-Anne. But you guys? This is all getting to be too, too much.

6:25: A procedural note during this ad for BladderBasics.com.  (I swear I am not kidding.) As we enter the ceremony, I'll be posting predictions and personal preferences for each movie category as it comes up. I have seen none of the TV, so for those races, I'll only post predictions. And bitchy comments that don't matter a damn, but here I'll be, making them. Any questions, class?

6:27: Lauer is trying for an Aeschylus joke. It's as bleak as you think.

6:28: Daniel Day-Lewis is here in Silver Fox mode. Lauer hands him a photo of Day-Lewis himself alone in the Lincoln Bedroom in the White House. Rebecca Miller looks as though she's thinking of something else. They look to me like they've just had that "Why are you always so late??" / "Well, why are you always so early??" fight, which is a personal favorite of my household.  Of the two, do you think Daniel is the late-runner or the early bird?

6:29: Julianne! Sort of a square-shouldered dress, mostly black with a large, diagonal white detail across the waist. Tom Ford, as ever.  Her hair is not completely un-Palin-like.

6:32: Lovely to see Richard Gere here—which is not always my precise feeling, but he's quite good in Arbitrage.  He, of course, was "in India, and in a fairly remote area of India" when the nominations were announced. Of course he was.

6:33: Adele on writing a Bond song: "A lot of people have succeeded with this, and a lot of people have fallen, too." She is like a nuclear power-plant of charm and charisma.  She fanks everyone, profusely.

6:35: No one on the Today staff has conceived a single question for a single partner/spouse beyond "What are you wearing?" I hope every nominee's partner/spouse gets full control of the remote for at least a week after gigs like this.  For Denzel's daughter, they expand only slightly to "Who are you excited to meet?" And not even "Whom are you excited to meet?", so i>that's tragic.

6:36: Denzel says he researched his role in Flight by entering "Drunks" as a search-term on YouTube. a) That sounds like an instant roadway to madness, and also to paralyzing boredom, and b) Really? You can tell us, Denzel. Is that really what you did?

6:38: THE TRADITION LIVES! The possibly life-threatening anti-depressant Abilify, which isn't even an anti-depressant but something you take with an anti-depressant, is once again sponsoring the Globes.  This year in an animated form.  After five years of this, you have to ask whether the tables inside the Globes ballroom are stocked with huge bowls of Abilify, candy-coated like Jordan almonds.

6:41: Lauer and Guthrie, caught without anyone to talk to, just start vamping by naming the people they've previously talked to. Which is sort of what I'm doing.  I'm live-blogging their own live-blog of an experience they're actually having.

6:42: Ewan McGregor is being a great sport talking about his ...let's say his gratuitous nomination for Yemen. But then Al Roker just interrupts him and sends him off.

6:43: Hugh Jackman compares singing live for a camera to filming a nude scene, in its high embarrassment factor and total lack of protection. That's an interesting way to think about it. I just said something nice about Les Mis, or at least about a Les Mis participant. Don't let anyone tell you therwise. Deborra-Lee Furness stands there smiling, totally unaddressed by either interviewer.

6:47: Jessica Chastain—in great, unmoving waves of hair swept straight backward, and a pale-aqua dress that I wouldn't describe as fitting her perfectly—says Zero Dark Thirty's huge box office this weekend might "be a sign that people want to participate in the conversation [about the film's use of torture] and be allowed to make up their own minds about it.  And I'm glad the film is starting these kinds of discussions, because to me that's what art does."  She does say that Maya, in her mind, is an example of one of the "unsung heroes" of the bin Laden operation, which may not square with viewers who like to think of Maya in more ambiguous terms than that.  But the red carpet is, after all, a precisely engineered device for neutralizing nuance or ambiguity.  Or conversation of any kind, actually, so it's impressive that she's even gotten this far.

6:51: Sofia Vergara is hawking her Twitter account and her Instagram account, so you can find out "what's really going on, inside the Globes." If anyone is or is not being tortured at the Globes, Sofia will crack the case wide open.

6:53: Dustin Hoffman, word for word, on his own directorial debut, Quartet: "I know it sounds like a 'Wait for video...,' but it's not. Go see it. It's #1 in England." Sell it, Dustin! (Can anyone from England confirm? Is Quartet sweeping the country?  I know Les Mis opened there on Friday, but did Quartet absolutely clobber its ticket sales?)

6:58: Some NBC operatives counting down to the telecast, drowning out the patter of the hosts.

The Ceremony...

7:00: Tina (emerald) and Amy (blood red, plunging neckline) have already changed clothes from 20 minutes ago! Tina: "Tonight we celebrate the TV shows that have entertained us all year, and the movies that have only been in theaters for two days."

7:01: Tina: "Ricky Gervais could not be here tonight, because he is technically no longer in show business."

7:02: Huge crowd cheers for Lena Dunham and Girls, but I'm way more excited to see Jodie Foster and Robert Downery, Jr., still hanging out all these years after the unimprovable Home for the Holidays.

7:03: Whoa! Amy! "I haven't been following the controversy about Zero Dark Thirty, but when it comes to torture, I trust the lady who spent three years married to James Cameron." Crowd freaks out. Jessica Chastain aghast. Julianne Moore agog, but loving it. Bigelow smiling but trying to hide her face.

7:04: Ohhhhhhh, Jodie ruined everything by having Mel Gibson on her other flank!

7:04: Tina: "Quentin Tarantino is here, the star of all my sexual nightmares."

7:05: Amy: "Meryl Streep is not here tonight.  She has the flu, and I hear she's amaaaazing in it."

7:05: Oh, here comes the inevitable Somebody Else Played Sarah Palin joke. Prevoiusly from Tina: "Anne, you were so fantastic in Les Misérables. I haven't seen anyone look so lonely and abandoned since you were stuck there onstage at the Oscars with James Franco." Hathaway, like Bigelow, both amused and horrified.

7:07: BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR 
My Vote: Tommy Lee Jones in a squeaker over Philip Seymour Hoffman. PSH has more interesting challenges to face, but the role as written and as performed still doesn't totally jell with me. Tommy Lee creates a full person, with even more subtlety on second viewing than on first. Plus, he gets huge Hope Springs-related bonus points from me.
Prediction: Tommy Lee Jones, I think? I think? This damn category. Only Hoffman declined to show up.
Winner: Christoph Waltz?? What is happening?  Did everyone else see a full character here, where I observed only about two-thirds of one?  If even?  Is actorly range just not an issue for people anymore? Hmmm.

7:10: Tarantino and Weinstein are sitting together, so that frees someone up from having to sit between them.

7:11: BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (ABSOLUTELY ANYTHING TELEVISED)
Prediction: With Bowen at home, I have to admit I'd love to see Sofia Vergara finally get a podium moment after perpetually clapping from the audience for absolutely everyone else. Failing any strong hunch here, I'll go with my own preference. (This, incidentally, officially makes me the first prognosticator ever to be swept up by personal biases.)
Winner: Silly rabbit. "Maggie Smith could not be here this evening." By which presenters Kerry Washington and Dennis Quaid mean, "Raise your hand if you thought even for one moment that Maggie Smith entertained coming to this."

7:13: Joking aside, that crack in Waltz's voice and the phrasing of his comments sounded like he was thanking – doctors, maybe? Has he been sick? Does anyone/everyone know about this?  I'm paid to over-read, so it's an occupational hazard.  But still...

7:14: Emily Blunt and Anne Hathaway: still friends, still hanging out. See, some good things do last.

7:16: BEST MINISERIES OR TV MOVIE
Prediction: Game Change, since at least as I recall, they went pretty big for Recount.
Winner: Game Change! That's right people, bring Julianne onto the stage every chance you get. This movie was made by Julianne, Sarah Paulson, and half a dozen white guys.

7:17: Eva Longoria is here in funereal chic. Mr. and Miss Golden Globes are the son of Michael J. Fox and Tracy Pollan (looks just like Dad) and the daughter of Frances Fisher and a man she now openly detests on Twitter, Clint Eastwood (looks just like Mom).

7:19: BEST TV ACTRESS (MOVIE/MINISERIES)
Prediction: Julianne Moore, amidst a Survival of the Fittest Movie Star derby.
Winner: Julianne! But not without besting unannounced competition from "Darcy St. Judge," a woman with terrible teeth who starred in Dog President as "a psychic who solved her own murder." And by that I mean, Amy Poehler, acting up in the audience.  Julianne gives "a shout-out to two women who I think made a huge difference in the 2008 election, Tina Fey and Katie Couric." Wow.

7:22: Her High Holiness the Empress of Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Jones, swans out to introduce, in her smokiest voice, a clip from the trailer from Les Misérables.  She unintentionally gives a perfect demonstration of the perils of live singing.

7:24: So is this going to happen all night? Amy and Tina are going to wear fright make-up and weird wigs and play "sixth nominees" in the audience?  I'm all for it.  Hell, I'd have voted for them in Best Supporting Actor.

7:27: President of the HFPA either didn't hear Tina and Amy's hilarious Hunger Games-themed introduction of her, or she doesn't get it. Or, you only become president of the HFPA by developing an incredibly thick immunity to what is happening around you.  She says something about "retreating into the Delta twilight" but then offers a self-deprecating joke about how "I know Jeffrey Katzenberg will never forget my name, because he never knew it."  And then she asks Bradley Cooper to come up and see her sometime.

7:29: Rosario Dawson is exactly who I predicted would be assigned as our docent to the Best Exotic Marigold Hotel clip. I could have won a fortune on that bet.

7:30: Salma Hayek and Paul Rudd, presenting together, and sharing the same cocktail of virgin's blood.  How else to explain the eternal youth?

7:31: BEST TV ACTOR (DRAMA)
Prediction: Damian Lewis, since they missed him last year, at the outset of the Homeland tsunami.Winner: Damian indeed. Like Salma and Paul, he looks even better than usual, which is a feat in all three cases.  Is it the much-commented-upon freezing weather outside?  Is it acting as a fabulous preservative for everybody? Whoa, Kate Hudson is shooting Damian Lewis a look of pure, carnivorous Want.  Damian dedicates his award to his late mum.

7:34: BEST TV SERIES (DRAMA)
Prediction: Homeland, despite the world's Downton obsession.
Winner: Homeland, although I find it hilarious that the voice-over person keeps having to say "Downtown Abbey, Season Two," to explain why it's no longer a Miniseries or TV Movie.  I hope later the same voice-over guy says, like, "30 Rock, Season Nine" and "Damages, Only Sort of a Season." For consistency's sake.

7:36: Uh-oh. Producers' speech features Homeland spoilers of the Who Gets Killed variety. Those of us with no paid cable will try to forget that.

7:37: Commercial break starting as Robert Downey, Jr., visibly kisses and then licks the side of Mel Gibson's face. Those of us of absolutely any persuasion whatsoever will try to forget that, too.

7:38: Commercial break allows me to pick up a great Poehler joke I missed from earlier: "If not treated properly, the HFPA can lead to cervical cancer." But not, surely, if treated with Abilify!* (*Except in cases where Abilify itself causes cervical cancer. Beware!)

7:41: John Goodman is here with Tony Mendez, the guy played by Ben Affleck in Argo, to introduce the movie. Failing any Jolie-Pitt in the grand ballroom, Clooney has attached himself to Affleck and Garner at their table.  Let's assume the waitstaff is calling this "Table #1."

7:43: BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
My Vote: I'm about equally split among all of the nominees save for Argo, but I guess I'd give the narrow edge to Cloud Atlas
Prediction: Life of Pi seems closest to the register of vaguely "world" music that the HFPA often prefers.

Am I right that this category officially marks Jason Statham's debut as a major awards-show presenter? They've paired him with Jennifer Lopez, so she can show 'im the ropes.  And show him everything else she's showing in that dress.

Winner: Life of Pi it is! Mychael Danna's kind of an up-and-down composer for me, but I remember how moved and intrigued I was by his music in The Sweet Hereafter, so I've always had a soft spot.

7:46: BEST ORIGINAL SONG
My Vote: I'm tempted to say Bon Jovi's tune, since it exceeded my expectations and actually had to do some work for the film's plot. But in a surprise to myself, "Skyfall" has actually grown on me.
Prediction: I don't know, do you think "Skyfall" might get it? I know everyone reviles Adele.
Winner: "Skyfall," of all things. Everyone is delighted except Taylor Swift, who has just plunged visibly into subzero temperatures.

7:49: "My friend Ida and I have just been over there pissing ourselves laughing!" Adele. You guys, people love her so much that DANIEL CRAIG SMILED when she won.

7:52: "The miraculous is everywhere! In our homes! In our minds!" Weirdly Joel Osteen-ish cellphone ad.

7:53: Okay, fine, Smash is packing Jennifer Hudson, but add to that Bernadette Peters and Liza Minnelli and Jesse! L.! Martin!  They're tryna rope me in, for sure...

7:54: BEST TV ACTOR (MOVIE/MINISERIES)
Prediction: Toby Jones would be fun to see, but I'm expecting the world's inexplicable enthusiasm for Benedict Cumberbatch might continue unabated. Meanwhile, presenters Jessica Alba and Kiefer Sutherland and nominee Kevin Costner are in a race to the bottom for Least Excited By What Is Happening.
Winner: Kevin Costner, whose acceptance spee—hey, there's Mark Harris!!!!—whose acceptance speeches for Dances with Wolves only finally ended sometime last week.

7:56: Toby Jones has crossed his arms and is giving Kevin Costner a platinum-plated SwiftFace.  Costner's is the kind of speech that, if you were just cutting in now, you would think somebody had just died.

7:57: Bill Clinton, of the ever-shrinking frame, advances to the microphone, and no one is more excited than Lena Dunham.  Lincoln intro, I'm guessing? (Yep.)

7:58: Still, it's sad to see the Globes sliding into such hard times. Years ago, in their full glory, they could have afforded Hillary.

7:59: Amy Poehler just stole my joke!

8:00: Kristen Wiig is doing her Taylor Swift impression right in front of Taylor Swift!  I'm going to donate to her!  Because, as you know, the next major fundraising deadline for her party is tonight!

8:01: BEST ACTRESS (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
My Vote: Meryl Streep, who leaves all nine of the other nominated lead-actress performances in the dust, if you ask me.
Prediction: Jennifer Lawrence, who seems pretty woozy tonight, so we'll have to hope for the best out of the speech.

Wiig and Ferrell together are incredible. "Judi Dench! I mean, where did she come from? A former police officer, and here, in her first movie, she's just terrific." Inventing a routine in which "Mariel Streep" is the sheriff of a town called Hope Springs. Tommy Lee Jones, with his surgically removed funnybone, is not amused.

Winner: Lawrence. Taylor Swift is excited enough to stand up and clap for her, taking a brief break from penning the new breakup song she's writing about Adele, right there on the tablecloth.  Jennifer: "What does it say? I beat Mer-yl!"  And also, "Harvey, thank you for killing whoever you had to kill to get me up here today."

8:06: Jodie Foster, who directed Lawrence in The Beaver, smiles happily at her throughout her speech. Gibson appears to be picking his teeth at her with his pinky nail. Basically, Mel is failing to even get a 200 on his SAT in Hollywood Etiquette. Don't pick your teeth with your pinky, Mel! The thing aimed at you is a camera.

8:11: BEST TV SUPPORTING ACTOR (SERIES, MOVIE, INFOMERCIAL...)
Prediction: Mandy Patinkin will finally get a knick-knack for his most understated performance in a long time. Would I say his first-ever understated performance? Who knows what I would say?
Winner: Ed Harris, who isn't here. Presenters always act so embarrassed when the victor in their category isn't in the house.

8:12: Jamie Foxx intro'ing Django Unchained as though some Abilify wouldn't go unappreciated.

8:13: Jonah Hill presenting with Megan Fox, proving that Judd Apatow has been a perfect wingman.

8:14: BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
My Vote: Nicole Kidman, who's working even more fearlessly without a safety net than Hathaway is, and is key to what a maddening, arresting, and bizarre experience Paperboy manages to be, whatever its manifest limitations.
Prediction: Anne Hathaway, because I am fearless about predicting underdogs.
Winner: Hathaway, which only I saw coming. Why do you even read other sites?  Seriously, Nathaniel predicted Amy Adams to win this!  Go back and look.

8:18: Thinking on her feet, Anne snatches back an ill-considered attempt at an "I just can't believe I won" type of speech with a lovely tribute to Sally Field as a heroic conqueror of typecasting. Straight from the two-time Princess of Genovia to the long-ago Flying Nun!  Well done, and a great way to flatter the only other nominee who can taste the gold-plating in her mouth she wants it so bad. (Sally seems quite touched.)

8:22: BEST SCREENPLAY
My Vote: Lincoln, for managing to convey a convoluted, ethically ambiguous political process in ways that entertain without cheating or simplifying as much as most other scripts surely would have.
Prediction: Silver Linings Playbook, I'm guessing, though Argo or Lincoln wouldn't surprise me.
Winner: Quentin Tarantino, who at least took some exciting chances in a script that I still don't think really works. Not my favorite win, but not as big a disaster as, say, Amanda Seyfried's inability to read from a TelePrompter.

8:24: Robert Pattinson finds all of this appropriately silly. Amanda Seyfried seems to be contemplating polar ice-cap melting, very seriously, in the corner. Or else is impersonating a polar ice-cap, except not melting.

8:25: Jeremy Irons, as rummed-up as usual at this ceremony, gives a boisterous pitch to Salmon Fishing in the Yemen.

8:26: BEST TV ACTOR (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
Prediction: Louis C.K., if the HFPA's zeitgeist antennae are working.
Winner: Don Cheadle, who's impossible to begrudge anything. Not that I'm even tempted to.

8:28: Another break for everyone to get another Manhattan, and for Andie MacDowell to hawk L'Oréal. Anyone out there? Anyone wondering whether Jessica Alba and Harvey Weinstein truly find each other hilarious?  Or is she just being affable so that he'll think about casting her in Tarantino's next movie, where César Chavez and a mute female sidekick fire bazookas and hurl ninja stars at the 1%?

8:32: Sylvester Stallone, who seems like probably a nice person, and Arnold Schwarzenegger, who almost makes me pine for Mel Gibson.

8:33: BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
My Vote: Amour, which somehow got no other nominations tonight but would seem to have an easy path to victory here.
Prediction: Amour, easily, even though the slate of nominees is gratifyingly strong.

So, yes: "Austria" made Seth MacFarlane think of Hitler, and makes the HFPA think of Schwarzenegger. We're doing super well on our cultural word-association, Hollywood!

Winner: Amour, directed by the remarkably bunny-like Michael Haneke. Even Marion Cotillard, star of fellow nominee Rust and Bone, is looking at him with awe.  She might be one of five people in the room who has seen another Haneke movie. (Mark, I know you're another.)

8:35: BEST TV ACTRESS (DRAMA)
Prediction: After nearly a decade of losing everything she's ever been nominated for, I think Claire Danes might finally be able to decorate her studio apartment. But Connie Britton would be an interesting spoiler.
Winner: Claire Danes pulls off the biggest upset since Hathaway, and also tries momentarily to act surprised and humbled, neither of which sits perfectly easily on the shoulders of Claire Danes.

8:37: Danes remains Grand Mistress of the Humble Brag: "I have to thank the HFPA for being so generous to me - I was up here when I was 15!" And then, "I want to thank our writers for not buckling under the pressure of having written such a stunning first season." That last one is only slightly a paraphrase. Julianna Margulies drums up a solid smile for her, but Dockery, Close, and Britton don't quite get there. Give it up to Danes, though, for a typically well-phrased and passionately stated Hooray to superb television, and superb female roles therein.

8:43: Sacha Baron Cohen, who is just. So. Such a source of. Freshness. And joy.  I'm donating to Tommy Lee Jones as well, who is giving Pure Hatred to SBC.

8:44: BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
My Vote: Frankenweenie, because even though the impression wasn't quite lasting, I did enjoy the tone, the jokes, the visuals, and the storyline while I was sitting there.
Prediction: Frankenweenie, because Tim Burton's last few features imply we may never have an opportunity to give him a prize again.
Winner: Brave, which is a genuine surprise. Also a surprise is that the woman standing next to winning director Mark Andrews is not co-director Brenda Chapman. Not that surprising, I guess, since Chapman got feyert.

8:48: Liev Schreiber, trading on barely-remembered Taking Woodstock associations, walks out to introduce Ang Lee's Life of Pi. Derek's here now, and so of course when Liev Schreiber walked out, he said, "Look! Liam Neeson!" Awww....

8:49: BEST TV ACTRESS (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
Prediction: Solid arguments for all five nominees, but maybe Amy Poehler, since she'll have the most fun lording it over her co-host.

Amy Poehler of course scores the biggest laugh by managing to be in Clooney's  lap, both of them sipping on Scotch, lips inches away from each other, when her nomination is read out.

Winner: Lena Dunham, who pulls a huge upset in being the first winner to burst into tears. And this is after Hathaway, so it was a genuine competition.

8:52: Dunham is inhabiting a zone of the Winner's Universe somewhere between Jennifer Connelly (reading melancholically from a dog-eared sheet of paper) and Diablo Cody (right on the knife-edge of full-on hot mess).

8:55: Tina, faux-drunkenly: "Congratulations, Lena. I'm glad we got you through middle school." Amy Poehler's Boob is the new Angelina Jolie's Leg.

8:56: Tina: "Our next presenter is so versatile, he played Iron Man in three different movies!" Here's Downey, kicking off JodieFest, i.e., the Cecil B. DeMille Award.

9:00: Downey thanks Jodie Foster for her philanthropy, and for two seconds, I literally thought he was referring to her ceaseless friendship with Mel Gibson.

9:02: Chickabay!!! Tay in the Wee-un!!

9:04: Jodie's montage is unexpectedly full of enormous fireballs and loud screaming, all scored to electric guitar.

9:08: Jodie's speech is too complicated to even get into here. The audience's response to it is also too complicated to get into here.

9:13: So, she sort of publicly came out, but sooort of didn't come out, but then she definitely did, but not before insisting on her right to privacy. Bordering on some self-congratulation for her indomitable keeping of her own counsel. The humor was a little spastic and hugely idiosyncratic, and the audience wasn't quite sure where to be with it. (I do not blame them.) But it was also a pretty extraordinary moment for Foster.  And then she ended the speech as something between "I'm eager to work less" and "I might be dead in two weeks."  It was a eulogy for her career, but ended with "Here's to the next fifty years." The audience, which looked fascinated but uncomfortable for long swatches of it, had rallied totally to her cause by the end. Particularly the actresses. That's what I would say, off the top of my head.

9:15: BEST DIRECTOR
My Vote: Steven Spielberg, who keeps Lincoln fleet, substantial, sober, and colorful throughout. Gets in his own way a few times, but compared to what he knocks out of the park, I'll happily take it.
Prediction: Ben Affleck, who will be greeted as though he has just lost both his parents and all his children, shortly before ending dysentery everywhere.
Winner: Ben Affleck, who gives a throaty, heartfelt endorsement to his fellow nominees and to non-nominees, mentioning Paul Thomas Anderson by name. He's so nervous and sped-up!

9:18: Still Affleck, thanking everyone, adorably. Ending on Jennifer Garner. Derek is in stitches and giggles. He's still not used to seeing his college friend on TV in full awards-show dress.

9:20: BEST TV SERIES (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
Prediction: Girls, so the HFPA can look as hip as possible?
Winner: Girls, which simultaneously wins a Globe and Robyn as musical accompaniment and a standing O from Julianne Moore.

9:23: Lena: "HBO, we are cultists! We're obsessed with you!" She's now somewhere between Jodie Foster (speaking her own intensely self-aware but slightly inscrutable language) and Sally Hawkins (paralyzed by all the attention).

9:26: Zero Dark Thirty is now being advertised on TV with a children's choir singing Metallica's "Nothing Else Matters," from their black album. That's – one way to go. The box office is already huge, but imagine what it would be if anyone had any idea how to tastefully but honestly market it.

9:28: Christian Bale, looking slightly like he swam here, introducing Silver Linings Playbook. A little Visine, hon.

9:29: Jennifer Garner, cleaning up after Ben's omissions, as only she can, in super-sequined carnelian.

9:30: BEST ACTOR (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
My Vote: Bradley Cooper, because that is a daunting character to master in terms of both motivation and tone, and from my perspective, he nailed it.
Prediction: Hugh Jackman, but just barely over Cooper, because his particular form of suave celebrity seems impossible for the HFPA to resist.
Winner: Jackman. Everyone from Les Mis describing the incredible courage it would have taken the producers to make the film that way is telling the truth. Gutsy choices. Everyone who reads this site knows how I feel about the execution, but I am trying to say something nice. I don't love his performance, but there are strong moments in it, and he really went for it, too. That's two things.

9:35: An ad for that new TV show where Keri Russell is a member of the KGB. Obviously, typecasting, etc.

9:37: "Hurt Locker star Jeremy Renner" has already become "Hansel and Gretel star Jeremy Renner." Bleak.

9:38: BEST PICTURE (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
My Vote: Moonrise Kingdom, which surprises me, since I'm far from an Anderson disciple
Prediction: Silver Linings Playbook, because HFPA has not been as consistent lately about genuflecting before musicals, any musicals, as they were in the Evita > Fargo era. Which was a very dark era. But Les Mis is obvoiusly not impossible.
Winner: Les Misérables, or as Dustin Hoffman pronounces it, "Les Mizzerah-BUUH!" Anne Hathaway immediately undercuts her popularity rating, with everyone, by leaping to the microphone and offering five more seconds of personal thank-you's. It's a protocol thing. Her producer: "I haven't forgotten anyone, because I haven't started yet." Hyperventilate in the back, Anne, come on. Boublil and Schönberg are here. The producer gets cut off in less than a minute. Yikes.

9:45: NBC needs the time in order to plug its absolutely hopeless-looking show about a doctor with split personality.

9:46: BEST ACTRESS (DRAMA)
My Vote: Marion Cotillard, less for how she fulfills the moments of big emotion than for how captivating she often is amid the character's surprising reticence.
Prediction: Jessica Chastain, who is surely missing, what, 80 of her Heiress performances for all this Zero Dark Thirty fanfare? I mean, I don't blame a girl. But if I'd paid $125 for a ticket... Wait, what was I talking about?
Winner: Chastain gives big thanks to her "dear friend Megan Ellison" (a producer of the film), and gives a nice tribute to Bigelow that I'll say more about in a second... and what I mean is, she gives a genuinely moving tribute to what it felt like to be a struggling actor for so long until just the last couple of years, and you can tell she means it.  It's concise, but it really lands, as do her remarks about Bigelow "breaking Hollywood's rules" about creating strong female characters and "doing more for women in Hollywood than you give yourself credit for."  The room looks impressed.  The Chastain/Lawrence decision was not made any easier for AMPAS voters tonight, given one's very touching speech and the other's very amusing one.

9:49: BEST ACTOR (DRAMA)
My Vote: Daniel Day-Lewis, because for once he got it together and was actually good in a movie.
Prediction: Daniel Day-Lewis, which is a surprise to me, because I had expected him to be as dreadful as usual.
Winner: Daniel Day-Lewis, who is only under-recognized in one way, and it's for being the biggest sweetheart in decades of awards shows. Seriously, go back and look at the tapes. Another impeccable, selfless speech tonight: "Tony Kushner, every day I am forced to live without the immeasurable richness of your language, I am forced to confront the impoverishment of my own." And he's practically choking back tears about this!  Gorgeous tributes to his wife and to Spielberg as well.  Describes how he hunts and scavenges all day for his characters, then comes back at home, drops his ideas before his wife like a cat presenting his mouse, and hopes she's proud of what he managed to find. Weird in the best way. Lovely.

9:54: BEST PICTURE (DRAMA)
My Vote: Lincoln, because it's edifying, economical, and entertaining. There are other movies I liked better this year, but this is a terrific one, and a way better-than-average winner.
Prediction: Lincoln, because even when the HFPA spreads things around, they still tend to skew a bit tony in the Best Picture field: see Atonement, The Hours, etc. Still, Argo took care to actually name drop the Golden Globes in its script, so...

Julia Robert is the surprise presenter! Delicious!

Winner: Argo, which plays very well in the room as a popular winner.Co-producer Grant Heslov thanks the troops in the field and "the folks in the clandestine services, who don't always get the credit they deserve, either." At least one other table of Best Picture nominees couldn't agree more.

9:59: Poehler gets the final line, on behalf of herself and Tina Fey, with a martini in hand: "Good night! We're going home with Jodie Foster!"

10:00: Thanks to everyone who came tonight!  Unlike every single person on screen, I didn't drink anything, but I had a great time.

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Sunday, January 29, 2012

Live-Blogging the 2011 SAG Awards

I wasn't planning on watching these, as I don't have cable, but I stumbled onto some kind of Filipino livestream and tweeted up a storm. I didn't move to the blog because I hadn't advertised and wasn't sure the feed would hold out. But as Kate Winslet's come-from-behind, dark-horse trophy for Mildred Pierce shows us, miracles do happen! For anyone who was sleeping, or was only belatedly interested, or is dying to re-live the magic, I'm moving all the tweets over here. I'll add times once Twitter designates them more specifically than "1 hour ago."

7:06 PM, CST BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR No, SAG. Do NOT invite the co-stars of nominees to present their awards. Especially when they absolutely won't win. #SAG #Tackiness

7:08 Christopher Plummer is seated next to Meryl. He looks all but indifferent to her praise on his way up. But it must be an out-of-body thing.

7:09 Christopher Plummer is honored to be nominated in the same company as Jonah Hill and Armie Hammer. Thanks Cosmo. Thanks Amanda! Loves wife.

7:12 BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Jessica Chastain has worked out the whole hair-dress situation beautifully. Stop worrying, everybody. #SAG

7:14 Octavia Spencer. First-ever name-drop of Medgar Evers at an awards show.

7:16 TV producers everywhere: there's no rule that you can ONLY cut to black people after actors from The Help win a prize. It's all freed up!

7:19 The unsung hero of this award season so far is the genial, dapper handsomeness of Kenneth Branagh. So pulled together. All smiles, always.

7:21 These ladies from The Help have mastered how to use their speeches to push back at people's condescension toward and gripes with the movie.

7:22 (I'm not saying all the gripes are undeserved. But they sure do have to hit the ball back at a lot of arrogant questions.)

7:23 TV BEST ACTOR (COMEDY) Subtle signals that even 30 Rock table thinks six, consecutively, is Enough for Alec. Similar signals from other attendees, but less subtle.

7:24 See? Jon Cryer only needs four minutes to assume his Happy For You game face. That's a professional. He's won an Emmy, people.

7:28 TV BEST ACTRESS (COMEDY) You guys. The Betty White thing. How much is enough? At some level, I realize nothing is enough. But at the prize-giving level...

7:29 Julie Bowen took what can only be called a gulp of wine after Betty bested her. She smooched Ty Burrell, in his little checkered shirt.

7:31 Jessica Chastain is here to insist serenely that there really are actors in cities besides NYC and LA. We also have doctors here! And food!

7:33 TV BEST ENSEMBLE (COMEDY) Kevin and Kyra are here to salute "the hits of a new generation." I'm not sure if this is to make the nominees seem fresh or K&K seem old. [Winner: Modern Family]

7:34 Can somebody fill me in on Jim Parsons' relationship to outness?

7:36 So will Sofia Vergara never win a solo prize, and people will go, "Lame!" Or will she win past her sell-date, and people will go, "So lame!"

7:39 Lili Taylor is doing voice-over for car ads. Am I more sad for her, or for the not-famous actor who once would have gotten that gig?

7:42 TV BEST ACTRESS (TV MOVIE) Glenn Close and Kenneth Branagh, presenting together! I can smell 1989 from here...

7:43 At what point do you vote for Diane Lane, just to thank her for sitting patiently and gorgeously through all those Winslet wins? #SAG

7:44 Kate Wins(let). She's not here, because everyone told her she had NO chance of winning. Not for this role.

7:47 The Help is about "women who would not let themselves be defined their jobs." That's their lead. (And Skeeter? Who's kinda aiming for that?)

7:47 TV BEST ACTOR (TV MOVIE) Zoe Saldana and Armie Hammer read a list of the real people these guys are nominated for playing. Don't fret, guys! We have biopics in here! [Winner: Paul Giamatti]

7:50 I would describe the mood in the room as... 60% seasonal fatigue, 10% desire to win, 30% annoyance with clapping for the same people, AGAIN.

7:53 Upon announcing the historic merger of SAG and AFTRA, which IS a big deal, the only sensible choice is to cut to Shailene Woodley. #SAG

7:55 My favorite reply to the Parsons question is @dylchap's: "Adjacent." Y'all apparently have your fingers on the pulse! I know nothing.

7:58 Shailene's spending the commercial break on her Blackberry, helping me get better residuals and a good back-end on this Twitter. #SAG

7:59 What does Rose Byrne have to do to get in on this intro?

8:01 Every time Bridesmaids is described as anything besides "the female Hangover," an angel gets its wings. And a hideous dress loses its tulle.

8:01 LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: MARY TYLER MOORE Standing ovation for Dick Van Dyke, presenting! "Hi, everybody. I'm what's left of Dick Van Dyke." Gretchen Mol ponders him, studiously.

8:02 Dick Van Dyke sounds exactly like Liza Minnelli after two cigars.

8:05 Mary Tyler Moore invented capri pants, but it was TOO MUCH for everybody. They had to mete out the capris. There were meetings about this.

8:09 Not to pull focus from MTM, but TNT just showed a double-profile shot of Tilda and Angelina, clapping, and it was like being on Mt Olympus.

8:13 Whoa. Difficult moment. Mary Tyler Moore deserves that prize 100% but it looks like it took a toll on her to be up there. Uneasy television.

8:16 The Mentalist ads have tried to pitch it as every possible genre: screwball, action, mystery, character drama. The next will be all-sung.

8:18 TV BEST ACTRESS (DRAMA) This was the Year of the Woman on television. Actresses were finally hired to be lawyers, as well as DAs. And one's a nosy neighbor!

8:19 Jessica Lange drops a pause in the middle of the phrase "upper-body ...strength" just because she can, and she got bored.

8:20 Lange: "Thanks to all the crazy... imaginative... people... who come up with this ...wild ride." #TheAromaOfAmbivalence

8:22 Dujardin has the collywobbles when he has to read from the teleprompter, but while Bejo is talking, he happily gets back to Eyebrow Acting.

TV BEST ACTOR (DRAMA) 8:23 If Steve Buscemi wins, the Bridesmaids ladies will have to take one for the team.

8:25 Cranston mimes knocking at a door! Adorable. It seems clear he is ready to conquer comedy, now that he already owns dramas and thrillers.

8:27 Announcer: "Please welcome Meryl Streep." Why didn't she just say, "Bow your heads"? Or just, "Subjects!" Or pass a tithing hat.

8:28 Put pockets and a foot-wide belt on it, and Meryl WILL wear it, sugar.

8:31 A number of the Memoriam clips have extremely awkward themes of death: Elizabeth Taylor, Clarice Taylor, Jackie Cooper crying, "I won't go!"

8:34 The advertising slogan for RuPaul's Drag Race is "Gag on the Eleganza!" They trademarked that right before War Horse got to it.

8:35 TV BEST ENSEMBLE (DRAMA) Linda Gray, Larry Hagman, and Patrick Duffy are co-presenting! Glenn and Kenneth feel like the kids on Modern Family now.

8:38 Boardwalk Empire wins Ensemble! Bottoms up, everybody.

8:41 Melissa McCarthy looks right at Kathy Bates and says, "She's awesome." Big crowd-shout for Midnight in Paris. (Okay, can we have Viola now?)

8:42 BEST ACTOR Natalie takes creamy, easygoing, voluptuous pleasure in reading the teleprompter script, just like she did at the Globes. So relaxed!

8:43 You'll literally never guess this, but for Clooney's clip, they picked that staggeringly unconvincing crying-at-her-bedside scene. #SAG

8:44 Jean Dujardin, people!!! We have got a RACE! Gag on THAT eleganza!

8:46 We're seeing a deep bench of happiness for this win. Angelina was all about it. Brad, George all smiles. Albert Nobbs table: into it.

8:48 Meanwhile, anyone born in the 90s may not know this, but eventually, Brad always morphs into his ladyfriend's spitting image. Always.

8:51 BEST ACTRESS The drivel that Ben Kingsley has to recite before presenting Best Actress is choke-worthy even by the standards of these sorts of things.

8:52 Viola's Bronx cheer sounds louder than Meryl's, but they're both impressive. Tilda's is surprisingly robust.

8:53 Tilda cringes and shrugs off her nomination, again.

8:53 VIIIIIIIIIIIIIOOOOOOOOOOOLA.

8:56 Viola pays it forward to Cicely Tyson. Who NEEDS to be on anyone's shortest possible list for Lifetime Achievement next year.

8:57 BEST ENSEMBLE And The Help pulls down Best Ensemble. Cicely gets to go up there after all! 12 actors are on the official list. These are some happy gals!

9:00 Viola Davis: "We ALL of us - I don't care how ordinary you feel - can inspire a change." And with that, an Octavia whoop, and a group hug.

9:01 I would like to thank this ersatz live-feed for giving me access to the show. I have ladled piping-hot viruses into my computer, I'm sure.

9:02 As Angelina and Tilda talk passionately about who knows what (??!!), we sign off. Sorry for clogging the feeds, everybody. Come back, now!

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Live-Blogging the 2011 Golden Globes

As events played out, the most recent entries appeared on the top of the page, so readers could simply hit Reload and see the newest stuff. This is also the easiest way for me to write and publish. Now, for clarity, I've switched the order, so that you can follow the whole transcript from chronological beginning to end.



11:45: Morning preparations for the Golden Globes officially commence with the pouring of tonic water into the ice-cube trays, for later. The gin's not going to dilute itself, people, and I think this live-blog pretty much doubled as community service last year when I taught you about freezing the tonic water. That's what Clooney does. Mavis Gary, too, in her little Minneapolitan skypod.

I'll be bobbing in and out until about 6:00pm CST, when the peanut gallery will be in full voice. Between now and then, we'll be listening to the nominated songs, and finding other ways to ask, Who is fit to inherit the mantle of The Social Network, Sharon Stone, and Keri Russell? If you don't think this is all very important, and quite a bit of fun, you're making a very grave mistake, comparable to not freezing the tonic water, and you haven't read this delightful, up-with-Globes missive from Tom Shone.

(If you're looking to kill time before the show, especially if you're new in these parts, have a poke around the blog and over at the website. Lots of exciting Best Actress action unfolding as we speak. Got a favorite Patricia Neal or Geena Davis movie? Don't be shy!)



11:56: In fact, let's squeeze in a song while we're getting ready to go to brunch. Elton John, bring it.



PRE-SHOW ORIGINAL SONG-A-PALOOZA

11:57: Hmmmm... feeling a little bit Electric Light Orchestra at the outset... Something about colors, and life being a many-splendored thing. I can mostly decipher the lyrics, beneath all the production, once again happening inside a room made of the finest sheet metal.



11:58: "Like a fly on the back of a bird"? Is that what he said? "Hello hello / My my my, what have we here?... Someone's out there, to say, Hello!" That part I'm sure about. These are the lyrics. But what this has to do with garden gnomes expressing themselves in iambic pentameter, I'll never know. (Wait, Gnomeo & Juliet is not in pentameter?)



11:59: Okay, well. It'll get better from there. Heading out to brunch, among a restaurant full of disgruntled Bears fans, still lamenting the post-season that will never be. These people are hung up on all the wrong interests, obviously.



1:45: Okay, we're listening again to that final lullaby from Albert Nobbs and thinking about what to wear tonight. Perhaps, as inspired by Janet McTeer in Nobbs, we will opt for eight layers of wool knits. We've always been Sinéad fans, ever since she rocked the 1989 Grammys in her combat boots and inked-up scalp. Sinéad was the original girl with a dragon tattoo, and she still gets to us more than Lisbeth. But this song is so airy? As Joe Reid observed, for a movie that lingered in pre-production for almost as long as I've been alive, a lot of its choices seem bizarrely vague, and the lyrics of "Lay Your Head Down" are a case in point. Who is the speaker in this song? Who is the audience? The baby at the end? Albert? In Albert's case, "lay your head down, darling," seems like a recommendation in questionable taste. What does each verse or even each line have to do with each other? Somehow the "la la la"s don't make it easier to puzzle out.



1:54: Derek feeling a little aggrieved about the $1.29 I have spent on a song from Gnomeo & Juliet. Explaining the scenario of that film induced a 60-second, gaping-mouthed, frozen closeup, while he gripped his Argo Tea. A sea of emotions. Very Nicole Kidman in Birth. I promise it was my hard-earned $1.29, not his.



1:56: So we've moved on to Madonna. "And I... can't tell you why... it hurts so much... to be in love with a masterpiece." Sort of "La Isla Bonita" after three Bufferins. "If you were the Mona Lisa, you'd be hanging in the Louvre...." I mean, I guess you can't argue with that.



1:59: This, too, feels thrown together in an almost blasé way, like something Madge put together while lying down in the third living room in the East Wing of the homestead, one leg on the couch and one off, both in slippers. "'Cause after all, nothing's indestructible." Again, who is saying this? What does this mean? Is this koan directed at W.E.'s critics? If "it hurts so much to be in love with a masterpiece," is that supposed to ameliorate the experience of being confronted with a movie that is, from what I gather, definitely not that?



2:07: Okay, I was going to space these out, but now that the usual sick thud associated with Best Original Song is overtaking me, let's soldier forward. Where is my Help DVD? Having already watched Viola walk down that tree-lined lane two times, I think I'll watch the "Living Proof" music video, advertised as a special feature.



2:10: So, doesn't it seem like the characters in The Help are always driving down that one road any time they're going anywhere? Emma pulling into town. Bryce getting liquored up on her way to tear Skeeter a new one. Even though that dirt road seems to dead-end at one big house?



2:12: So this is not a jewel of a lyric, either, but Mary J. is sort of the Viola of the reigning R&B thrushes. You can hand her some borderline pap, and she will dig out that emotional truth. Hard to separate performance from the song. Either way, it sure outclasses the other three. (Low bar.)



2:15: (Re: Mary J. Blige: you've all read this, right? One of my favorite things on the internet, even if they're a tad hard on Mary outside of T.T.L.O.A.E.J., and Mariah totally gets jacked in terms of Weight Fluctuation and Hand Gestures.)



2:19: So, we're spending another $1.29 on a cut from Machine Gun Preacher.



2:20: Is that the instrumentation from "Solsbury Hill" under Cornell's voice and lyric?



2:21: "Beauty and truth collide / Where love meets genocide...," and then something about fear. An allusion to machine-gun rounds echoing across a smoke-filled valley on fire, but I'm still hearing this daintily plucked acoustic guitar, re: A John Williams Christmas or similar. I like Chris Cornell, but...



2:23: Chris Cornell can obviously write a good song, but this song, I don't know. Would it help if I'd seen the movie? Anyway, remember when Sound Effects and Makeup used to be occasional awards at the Oscars, saved for really remarkable accomplishments? I would urge all film-awards bodies to go this route on Original Song. You hate for something like "Streets of Philadelphia" or "Things Have Changed" to get missed, and some years admittedly have pretty good rosters, but too often it is just a hot. mess.



2:25: Okay, so I'm a Mary J. Blige voter. Who would ever have seen this coming?



2:30: Back between 5:30 and 6:00 CST. Thanks for tuning in already, folks in Sherman Oaks and Mississippi, Toronto and Slough, Greece and Estonia! Enjoying the night's global theme already.



5:50: All right, we're back up! I have settled in with some of the key ingredients, including the Caesar salad, the POM juice (heart healthy!), and the whole gin & tonic situation. Also, failing my ability to procure chocolate pie, Big League chew, a cake shaped like a carrot, Hawaiian pineapple, or Carnage cobbler (née cafloutis), I am making it happen with this Golden Globe-shaped truffle from the chocolate-maker down the street. You'll notice I couldn't buy just one—could you?—but the Globe is in the back. You won't miss it.



6:00: And we're off to a good start, with no sound on the NBC feed!



6:01: Not that I don't prefer Carson Daly in silence, but are they really taunting me like this? I still can't hear a single thing.



6:02: Ricky Gervais scowling already, in his cranberry and black suit, talking to a reporter while his wife looks very much like they've just been arguing... and here's the sound! Right in on the line, "Their heads would explode!" and "If anyone's offended, I won't care."



6:03: Melissa McCarthy and her swell-looking Air Marshal, Ben! She's doing Badgley Mischka, and what looks a lot like Laura Linney's Oscar hair from '04. I have never hoped to see that again, but it's Melissa, so we love.



6:04: Carson Daly's already got Brad and Angelina. She is great at encapsulating her movie, and her attachments to the subject matter. It's a little awkward for Carson to have to hurricane right over to Brad: "Yeah, yeah, Bosnia! Totally! And what about Moneyball? How about that?"



6:05: Julianna Margulies, looking great in a sort of black-raspberry dress, has decided "They never give Golden Globes to the same performance twice," so she has no reason to be nervous. This is not strictly true, but if it's getting Julianna through The Stuff, we will let her think this. And if some sweet angel told her this just to help her out, don't tell Julianna!



6:07: We are all about the performative utterance tonight. The false but self-ratifying statement. Viz. Carson to Charlize: "Tell me about this movie and this character that absolutely everyone has responded to." So... she's supposed to talk about... Kristen in Bridesmaids? Surely he can't mean Mavis. Or that box-office juggernaut, Young Adult.



6:08: While some gal talks to Zooey Deschanel, I just have to tell you how fierce Viola Davis is looking in dark, dark mulberry, somewhere in the background. I guess we'll get to her later. So many colors tonight! Paula Patton in buttery yellow. Laura Dern in glittery jade-green. Nary a champagne gown in sight, so far!



6:10: Michelle Williams's dress is a form-fitting, high-necked, long-sleeved violet dress, with a kind of lacy material... And then there is a headband. It's Rita Hayworth meets Gold's Gym. But she's so sweet, and these sorts of events are so obviously not her rhythm—metabolically*—so we cut her slack. (*Thank you, Judy Davis, in perpetuity, for that.)



6:13: Commercial break, but picture and sound are both still being sheisty with me. We have 47 minutes to work. this. out., NBC.



6:15 The same gal who was quizzing Julianna if she no longer cares because she won last year is now asking Steve Buscemi the same thing. She has elected on an angle. She's going to play it. Don't talk to her if you didn't win last year.



6:16: "All you fashionistas out there, here is your dream woman, Nicole Richie." We have entered a surreal zone, no less so because Nicole Richie's hair ("by Suave Professionals") is an explicit homage to Bib Fortuna. And you Return of the Jedi fans know what I mean.



6:17: Elton John's here with his partner David Furnish, who I didn't realize produced Gnomeo & Juliet. "It was a labor of love, it took eleven years." He spent eleven years on Gnomeo & Juliet. You guys.



6:18: The "Since You Won Last Year" lady is talking to the head of the HFPA. "Are you allowed to tell me your favorite movie of the year?" I suspe—— whoa, Elle Macpherson. (The HFPA lady is comparing the Globes to the United Nations.)



6:20: My silence about Seth Rogen and his interview answers was conspicuous, people. And Rob Lowe is still auditioning as a natural comedian. It's fine.



6:21: Mary J. Blige is this year's torch-bearer for the annual effort to repeat Penélope Cruz's feathered-train look from the '06 Oscars. Somebody always tries this. It never goes the same way. Admittedly, no one until Mary J. has thought to pair that bottom-of-the-dress treatment with a form-fitting sequined top. Hope you've all bought her album, No More Drama, Ever, Again, Part I: The Sequel: Only the Beginning.



6:23: Octavia Spencer, whom I almost just called Octavia Butler, is looking ravishing in perfect makeup, gorgeous hairstyling, and an expertly tailored pink dress that cinches perfectly at the middle. She swats down a dumb rumor that her interviewer heard about A Total Dress Emergency!!!, and when told to enjoy the party tonight, she answers, "I already am." I assume this implies bourbon or similar, and we love her for that.



6:24: Commercial break for John Carter. WHY is this no longer called John Carter of Mars? Whom do they possibly think they are more successfully wooing with that title? Maybe The Courtship of Eddie's Father should have just been called Eddie. I wish Kill Bill had just been called Bill, so it could have made $900 million.



6:27: I will seize on this Southwest Airlines commercial to admit my deficits. I have not seen War Horse, 50/50, In the Land of Blood and Honey, most of the Animated nominees, or, um, any of the television. So you can process any smack-talking through that filter. But you know, I'm working at about 90%.



6:28: Carson: "Madonna, I just got done talking to Elton John." Madonna: "Really? Was he wearing a green dress?" Shade. She talks about how her nominated song, —



6:28: WAIT.



6:29: Is Morgan Freeman dating Frances Fisher now??? Clint's ex? How long has this been the case? Was Unforgiven secretly Jules & Jim and we didn't have any idea? (If you perceived the infrared love triangle that was playing out beneath the brown surface of Unforgiven, tell me all about it in the Comments.)



6:31: The big Nicole Richie Fan is now telling Claire Danes that last year, "You just oozed beauty onto the carpet." Keats, not even Keats could have come up with that.



6:32: More great-looking people: Amy Poehler (sparkly, interesting seams), Reese Witherspoon. Can I say Viola again?



6:33: Mila Kunis hauls out with the first black dress of the hour, which at 6:33 is pretty amazing. She says last year she was "like a young kid," but this year is totally different. Having passed through the purging fire of Friends with Benefits, she stands before us, catapulted into adulthood.



6:34: Salma Hayek, my all-time favorite announcer of the Oscar nominations. Do you remember how she lost her mind with enthusiasm for Penélope and for the fortuitous Year of All Mexicans in 2006? I don't think she'll be as rapturous giving an award to Modern Family or New Girl, but she doesn't need to be.



6:35: Leonardo DiCaprio was attracted to playing J. Edgar Hoover "because I don't really know how to define him." Sell us on that performance, Leo!



6:36: The cracks in Natalie Portman's thesping show. Under hot lights and a million cameras, in a very pretty but architecturally complicated magenta dress, she tries to ask Benjamin Millepied through a completely fixed smile, "Please stop walking so fast." Doesn't work. We can read your lips, Natalie. You both look annoyed. Benjamin sighs. He was born to move fleetly, with grace!



6:38: ABILIFY!!!!!!!!! Yes, Baby! It is the Globes! Repeat readers from past liveblogs know how much this ad means to me, every year. "Elderly patients taking Abilify have an increased risk of death or stroke." We are now up to three invocations of possible death. And this year, the commercial is animated. And the final title card wants us to know that the drug is really called Aririprazole. Abilify is just its sexy celebrity pseudonym, for TV.



6:41: The lady I've now learned to call Natalie ("You won last year," etc.) asks Matt LeBlanc what it's like to play himself on Episodes, and he shrugs off the question, obviously wanting us to know that he acts. So, her follow up is, "In real-life, are you a lot like your Joey character from Friends?" She is not feeling LeBlanc as a thespian, people. And we know she likes her questions once she's decided on them.



6:43: I feel you should all know that the gin & tonic is in my well-preserved Great Muppet Caper glass, from Burger King '82. My own little protest about whatever Anti-Muppet Fatwa went down among the song nominators.



6:44: The fashionista, the one who's not called Natalie (I think she's called Jeanie?), is talking to Emma Stone, whose dress is quite beautiful: sort of very, very deep purple, and some kind of magenta strip that's either part of a purse I can't see, or a component of the dress I don't fully comprehend. But Jeanie is having an intense case of Searching for Debra Winger Syndrome, because she is telling every one of these ladies that they are the best-dressed and they are her favorite. Does she not think they are all headed into the same room as each other? Do actresses not talk? In fairness, maybe their first topic isn't, "Hey, what'd Jeanie ask you?"



6:47: A birth-control product called Periguard is now being advertised, but you shouldn't take it if you have "certain cancers." Also "fewer than 1% of people who take Periguard are at risk of potentially life-threatening pelvic inflammations."



6:48: An ad with Ricky Gervais, where NBC once again tries to convince us that he was a Brave, Truth-Telling Comic last year, not a pretty lame a-hole who berated pretty ego-less nominees and made really, really, really cutting-edge jokes about Robert Downey Jr. in rehab, Charlie Sheen with hookers, and women in Hollywood who get plastic surgery. I really can't believe we were all so hard on his unbelievably vanguard material, but he must just be so far out in front of us that we think he's behind.



6:51: Natalie, the interviewer, not the slow-walking actress, wants to know how Glenn Close came to get an Original Song nomination. Glenn's answer—I want you to really take note here—is that the composer wrote a beautiful melody, and she wrote a lyric, and so they had a song. Good for Glenn, though, for naming so many Nobbs people by name: the composer, the wigmaker, the makeup artists, Janet McTeer. Total team player, that one.



6:52: I'm not just saying this to flatter Joe Reid, but Reese Witherspoon not only looks her best ever, in cherry red and in long, loose hair, but she pretty much vanquishes everyone else on the carpet. She looks amazing. Though no one has spoken with her.



6:53: Bryan Cranston looking great in his tux and his beard. Jeanie: "I think we're having fashion sex right now!" Cranston: "Uh, yeah, that's exactly right!"



6:55: The cast of Modern Family is like the cast of The Fighter was last year, and the way the Friends cast always was. They just all seem like they really, really, really, really like each other. My deep thought of the evening is: that's so fun.



6:56: So (commercial) one more thing about how we're going to proceed. I've already written predictions in each category, and though I won't post them till we get to each award, I won't change my mind about them during the ceremony. Not even if a colossal Ides of March sweep sets in early and just starts devouring everything in its path. I've considered that eventuality, but I will stand fast.



6:59: Natalie, when asked, says the person she was most excited to see tonight was Ricky Gervais. NBC has told their interviewers what to say.



7:00: Heeeere's Ricky. (First death glare is from Charlize, and she packs a big one.)



7:01: First joke is against NBC, and then he goes after the Globes, and Kim Kardashian. "The Oscars are to the Golden Globes what Kate Middleton is to Kim Kardashian." That's not bad.



7:02: Joke about Eddie Murphy and Norbit preceded by what feels a lot like a gay innuendo?



7:03: Jodie Foster plays along gamely with a Mel Gibson/Jodie's Beaver joke, and even thumbs-up's him through the joke until he turns on The Beaver a little. And now a Justin Bieber turkey-basting joke.



7:05: Glare count has now escalated to Amy Poehler and Elton John (burning). When Ricky gets to Bridesmaids, Melissa McCarthy looks terrified at what he might say.



7:06: Ricky pulls out Johnny Depp, who is profoundly orange. And asks him point-blank, "Have you seen The Tourist yet?" Which is a pretty good joke. But Johnny Depp gives a really nice spin to his own first line, "Awwww. He's - fun." Johnny's here to plug Hugo. This is what we're starting with?



7:07: Are those two kids gonna bop out here and present Animated Feature or something? No: Gerard Butler and Mila Kunis. Gerard still rocking the lion's mane.



7:09: BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
I WANT: Christopher Plummer, because he was great in his movie and avoided a lot of more obvious approaches and was Mike Wallace and Captain Von Trapp and leaves these others in the dust, even Viggo and Albert.
I PREDICT: Plummer. Brooks could happen, but I don't think so. Better shot here than with Oscar, though.

Viggo Mortensen is working a Martin Luther King honorary lapel pin.

VERDICT: It's Plummer! Gerard gives him a frat-boy roar, and Mila's super excited, too. Plummer thanks his fellow nominees first, and then, "That wily Scot, Ewan - that scene-stealing [something] from the Outer Hebrides." Shout-out to Cosmo the Dog! That's Cosmo 1, Uggie 0, for the only time tonight.



7:12: Plummer is seeming more frail tonight, and certainly much slurrier, than he was at the BFCA's. Lovely tribute to his wife of 43 years.



7:13: TV BEST ACTRESS (COMEDY)
I WANT: Amy Poehler, because she always livens up these joints in the most hilarious ways, but then never actually gets to be at the daïs. Though you know I love my Lauras.
I PREDICT: Zooey Deschanel, because the first-timers and ingénues always get a leg up from these skeezes. (Which doesn't mean the gals don't deserve it. There's just some serious B.A.A. going on, which is Babe Affirmative Action.)

VERDICT: Laura Dern! Stopping that Deschanel train. This is her third Globe in five nominations. She really pulls these down! She's the new Angelina, and I always like her speeches. I love that she's here with Mama Diane. Elle Macpherson is behind her, wondering if she can pull off another fierce runway walk off the stage, just like the one she threw down on the way out. She hasn't even noticed Ashton Kutcher, I don't think, and just try blaming her.



7:14: Meryl Streep is seated right next to Harvey Weinstein. I know she doesn't take the Celebrity Power thing at all seriously, but I'm surprised there's not someone somewhere whose job was to figure out at least a body or two to squeeze in between them. I mean, we want Meryl to have fun, right? Even if we don't think we want her to win?



7:18: A really insane blacksmith-themed Velveeta commercial, which just makes Velveeta seem even more unappealing. But then my favorite AT&T ad, with the guy checking the game while he's on a date.



7:19: Julianne!!!!!!! Still rocking emerald earrings, ten years after she first pulled 'em out. The Teleprompter people have played the hell out of Julianne and Rob Lowe. They are at an absolute loss as to what to say. But Helen Mirren loves a good snafu; she's eating this up in the audience. You will be stunned to learn that Andie MacDowell has a gorgeous daughter.



7:20: TV BEST MADE-FOR-TV MOVIE/MINISERIES
I WANT: Mildred Pierce, which I didn't love, but you know I like to see my Todd.
I PREDICT: Downton Abbey, because seriously, you people are obsessed! You internet people! You!

VERDICT: They threw the Mildred strangulation right into the preview clip! And they don't even let Julianne give the award to Todd Haynes, which sucks, because of course it goes to Downton Abbey. The cast of this joint have a weird Sopranos-y affect tonight. I am not feeling the waves of Modern Family mutual adoration.



7:22: TV BEST ACTRESS (MOVIE/MINISERIES)
I WANT: Emily Watson, because I've never heard her give a speech, and I was just celebrating her birthday yesterday, and we need some surprises up in this.
I PREDICT: Kate Winslet, because f'real. These people put out for her in Revolutionary Road, and if you're willing to do that, there is no turning back.

Diane, Kate, and Emily all look super! And now Julianne will get to make Todd Haynes's night.

VERDICT: Kate Winslet, stuck in the back with all the other half-citizens who do TV instead of movies, or even in addition to movies. There's a sort of one-drop rule happening. Do TV once, and move to the back row, people. Todd Haynes gets his close-up, and Kate is devoting her whole speech to him. "I learned things from you that I will remember for the rest of my life." Love her thanks to HBO, "for being absent when we needed you to be absent, and present when we needed you to be present."

Turns out you can be Kate Winslet and Stick Man will play you off. So it's definitely On tonight.



7:27: You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger vet Freida Pinto pops in to plug Midnight in Paris. She insists there's something we learn during it, and I don't think Freida would lie. Kate Capshaw bolts for the bathroom and brings Spielberg with her. Jane Lynch and Glenn Close entertain each other.



7:29: Alexandre Desplat's Birth score has been scooped for a Cadillac ad. Which makes sense from a certain POV, since it's a Cadillac among scores. But I hope he exacted the same "Oh, you like me now!" tariff that other un-nominated but brilliant scores have deserved over the years upon becoming Madison Ave staples. Kronos Quartet and Clint Mansell know exactly what I'm talking about.



7:30: I'd love one more paean to Todd Haynes before the evening's over, but I don't assume we're going to get one.



7:32: Jeremy Irons chaperones Aida Takla O'Reilly, the impresaria of the Hollywood Foreign Press, and he throws a supportive arm around her. Nicole Kidman pays her some fixed attention. Nicole is seated with Harrison Ford? Madonna does that amazingly sphinxlike thing she does where you can't tell if she's focused of if she's inwardly laughing at this woman.



7:33: Shailene Woodley is only a lukewarm Jake Gyllenhaal fan, based on applause levels. Jake's here to intro My Week with Marilyn. It took me an embarrassingly long time to make the Michelle Williams connection between this actor and this movie. Michelle Williams's headband is quite spangly, so that makes it less Gold's Gym, though I still don't get it.



7:35: William H. Macy and Madeleine Stowe, fairly impassive in the face of the Gervais. Salma Hayek actively annoyed. Paula Patton cheering up Melissa McCarthy.



7:36: TV BEST ACTOR (DRAMA)
I WANT: Damian Lewis, because we all have our crushes, and stop acting like we don't.
I PREDICT: Bryan Cranston, because Hugh Laurie is the only repeat winner in this category in almost 30 years, and Cranston's never copped this. Odd, since Cranston has, what, six Emmys, and Laurie has none. Grammer could also get it, based on novelty of the show—which, again, the HFPA really goes for.

VERDICT: Paula Patton's really happy for Kelsey Grammer; I take it she isn't a huge "Bryan Craston" fan. Melissa McCarthy still looks sort of... irked. But how is Kelsey Grammer already married again?



7:38: TV BEST SERIES (DRAMA)
I WANT: Homeland, I guess, but only because it sounds like the smartest of the lot, based on friends' reviews. I don't really have a strong preference here.
I PREDICT: Homeland, since it seems to have the critical heat, and TV Globes are always about what's hot this. exact. second. Which is at least better than the Emmys can usually say.

VERDICT: Homeland. Paul Feig is stand-up-and-clap excited about this; Ben Kingsley's wife seems pretty outraged. Melissa McCarthy's mood is still not totally clearing. I'm really eager to check out this show. I didn't know Michael Cuesta directed it! But I did know it starred "the incandescent Claire Danes and the irrepressible Damian Lewis." I did not know Damian Lewis was "irrepressible," and I wonder what that means. Doesn't it seem unavoidably euphemistic in this context? I mean, he's not Roberto Benigni.



7:41: M.G.C. Mutual Goddess Contact: Laura Linney has pushed her way to the Apartheid Barrier that keeps the TV people from the movie people, and she kisses Charlize Theron on the cheek and mouths at least the words "You were..." I'm assuming some vigorously complimentary adjective ensues. The overseers from District 9 cruise by with their automatic pulse-rifles, a bit discomfited by this modicum of contact between the film stars and their catfood-eating underlings.



7:44: BEST ORIGINAL SCORE
I WANT: Dragon Tattoo, which I wasn't as musically in love with as I was with Social Network, but I think it had more going on in a more creative way than Artist or (for crying out loud) Hugo
I PREDICT: The Artist, only because they don't repeat winners a lot, though I badly want to predict Korzeniowski, because I love smelling an HFPA rat, and these W.E. nominations have got "Lunch is on me, fellas! Put it on my tab!" written all over 'em.

Due credit to Jimmy Fallon's quick, incredible retinue of Mick Jagger impressions.

VERDICT: Ludovic Bource for, as Fallon says, The Arteest! Everyone claps, and then a few people pass out after Bérénice Bejo singes them with her beauty. Bource starts, "I'm sorry, I'm French."



7:48: BEST ORIGINAL SONG
I WANT: "The Living Proof," but not because I think it's so, so fabulous. I am excited to see Mary J. Blige become a major award winner.
I PREDICT: I think Glenn is all over this.

VERDICT: "Masterpiece"! This isn't really a defensible win in any way, but it's worth it for the camera angle that discloses Madonna as sitting three seats down from Meryl Streep, so Nathaniel won't be able to sleep tonight. Some genius operating the show cuts to Antonio Banderas as Madonna approaches the mic, and Melanie Griffith, also a genius, manages to look completely away from this camera. Mary J. Blige looks a little hurt, and Elton John looks like he is not feeling the Madge. Andrea Riseborough gets a great acknowledgment, and Madonna is steely enough to get away with calling Harvey Weinstein "The Punisher."



7:52: I'm experiencing an Ignorant American moment. A Turkish actress is here to plug the planet's collective fixation on the Golden Globes, and I have no idea who she is. As compensation, I can tell you that Jodie Foster's kids are adorable. Who's feeling well-compensated?



7:54: Mascarpone ganache. This live-blog has been brought to you by Canady Le Chocolatier. Represent, Chicagoans! South Wabash, just up from Roosevelt. You won't ever be sorry.



7:56: NBC really thinks I'm going to watch this Katharine McPhee/Debra Messing show, which I'm not going to do, even with Anjelica Huston.



7:57: And wouldn't you know, here are Debra Messing and Katharine McPhee!

TV BEST ACTOR (MOVIE/MINISERIES)
I WANT: William Hurt, because he was a big-deal actor to me when I first got excited about movies, before I realized it was all about the women, and it's been nice having him back.
I PREDICT: Dominic West, out of residual affection for The Wire. But it seems like any of them could win, and I truly have no idea, or any basis to judge.

VERDICT: Idris Elba, which I'm pretty sure Nathaniel called. The offscreen announcer provides, as Idris's previous professional apex, the fact that he produced a track on Jay-Z's 2007 album. Which is great, obviously. But can I paraphrase Tess Ocean again? "He also acts, occasionally."



7:59: Brad Pitt, avec cane, like Jennifer Aniston was back when she won, is plugging The Ides of March. The Brad-George bromance is a bromance like no bromance. Will whoever wins Best Actor decide to Ving Rhames it over to the other guy?



8:00: Seth Rogen walks out with Kate Beckinsale. "Hello, I'm Seth Rogen, and I am currently trying to conceal a massive erection."

BEST ACTRESS (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
I WANT: Kristen Wiig, because even if she's not a totally polished big-screen performer yet, she wrote herself a layered part and made it funny and sobering, often mere seconds apart. Viz. "Are you f*cking kidding me??" inside the shower, straight into mauling that big cookie and losing her battle with a fondue fountain.
I PREDICT: Michelle Williams, and I'm at least interested to hear a speech from her. Have we ever heard one before?

VERDICT: Michelle Williams, even though Seth Rogen totally calls it out as "a hysterical comedy." Michelle wants to thank her daughter first, including for listening to bedtime stories for six months in a Marilyn Monroe voice. Plus, a shout-out to Marilyn's own Globe win from 1959.



8:03: Okay, so we knew that was happening. But you guys, can we talk about the huge crowd-roar for Kristen Wiig. I recognize I might be wrong about predicting her for an upset nomination in Best Actress. But am I really crazy for predicting this?



8:05: Also, really, Seth Rogen? Did we absolutely have to?



8:06: I mean, we absolutely had to?



8:07: Meanwhile, NBC has cooked up a special show to teach you that if you take a picture of your child, you are basically inviting a predator to your house. You can find out all about this ridiculous, dangerous error of yours, in an hour-long special.



8:08: TV BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (SERIES/MOVIE/MINISERIES)
I WANT: Brían O'Byrne, who is to Mildred Pierce what Patrick Wilson was to Angels in America in 2003: the best, most self-effacing actor in the trickiest part in a large-ish male ensemble, so you just know he's the one who'll never win anything, or even get nominated. Which he isn't, in this case. Phooey. Can I say 'Phooey'?
I PREDICT: Peter Dinklage, because whatever's happening with him on that show, the world is apparently in thrall.

VERDICT: Peter Dinklage. I am Cassandra! But I would rather talk about un-nominated Jesse Tyler Ferguson hilariously holding an index card that says, "Whatever..." over Eric Stonestreet's shoulder while his nomination was announced. Peter Dinklage lets us know that his mother instructed him that Guy Pearce would be winning. Why didn't she call me? I am Cassandra! (Peter ends by telling us to Google Martin Henderson.)



8:11: George Clooney walks out with Brad Pitt's cane, which Angelina Jolie finds hilarious. Oh, so of cou— yes. George is pitching Moneyball. This is all very sweet, but I enjoy that Meryl and Viola can just support each other on their own time, in subtle ways. I realize these guys are friends. I toooootally get it.



8:13: BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
I WANT: To not have this category. Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King, and Toy Story 2 all won Best Picture from this crowd. Maybe the Academy needs this ghetto category but the HFPA has proven they don't, and this lineup feels sad to me, even though I liked Rango.
I PREDICT: I think Rango will pip Tintin, unless I'm discounting the Spielberg pull too much. Based on his non-nomination for War Horse, I'm assuming that I'm not.

Channing Tatum and Jessica Alba start us off with a little bit of Affirmative Action sermonizing about how animated features seriously are totally awesome. Because everyone in this room only watches documentaries.

VERDICT: Tintin takes it, and while Kate Capshaw is absolutely delighted for him, Michelle Pfeiffer, sitting right on the other side of Kate, looks not even the slightest bit moved by this turn of events. I don't think her body temperature even changes during these things, unless she's getting to sing the virtues of Jeff Bridges for the masses. There's that, being at home with the kids and the donkeys, and there's pretty much everything else.



8:16: Katharine McPhee, crouching on the rug, is pouring her heart out to the über-maternal Michelle Williams. I'm pretty sure Paula Patton and Glenn Close are having the best times, out of everyone in the room. Charlize, I would say less so.



8:17: If I can be Lee Edelman for just a moment, does anyone else feel like we're getting even more "I'm a parent first and an actor second" / "I'm nervous because my new daughter is with a babysitter for the first time" / "Without my family nothing else matters" tonight than usual? Is it a defense mechanism against Gervais? Is everyone just super in touch with their whole-life priorities? I'm totally sympathetic to this, but sometimes the balance of the evening tips such that people seem cowed out of taking an evening to take pride in their specifically professional accomplishments. Just one audience member's reaction. I actually kind of liked Ricky Gervais's joke about how "none of your family members had anything to do with any of this!"



8:20: Ewan strolls out, immediately out-handsomes everyone, out-brogues everyone, and plugs 50/50.



8:21: Now Clive Owen and Nicole Kidman! The producers heard that I was feeling cranky and are now trying to seduce me. It is working.

BEST SCREENPLAY
I WANT: Moneyball, half for lines like "...fifty feet of crap...," and half because the other nominees are so blech.
I PREDICT: The Descendants, though I hate to. Allen's a possiblity, though. So's The Artist. So is Moneyball. You guys, I do not predict The Ides of March. Look at me go!

VERDICT: Midnight in Paris. Nicole says, "Woody wants to say thank you to the Hollywood Foreign Press," making perfectly clear that Woody has transmitted no such message.



8:23: TV BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (SERIES/MOVIE/MINISERIES)
I WANT: Jessica Lange, because of Frances. That's the rule, chirrens. Make Frances, and for the rest of your life, all other things being equal (as they are here, to me), I will always back you. Also, the person who just laughed when I said "chirrens" is a big American Horror Story fan. Make a South Carolinian happy, HFPA!
I PREDICT: Sofia Vergara, because why end the Reign of Jane Lynch and disinvite Julie Bowen if it's not all a master-plot to let Sofia finally hit a microphone?

VERDICT: Jessica Lange, also seated in outer Kandahar. This is her fifth win, so those three-peaters like Dern and Grammer and Winslet can just stop feeling special.



8:25: Jessica Lange seems happy but maybe not ecstatic, even though her speech is incredibly sweet on the subject of writers, and good writing. She has, however, absolutely won the Reaction Shot Popularity Contest of the evening so far. Streep beams at her. McTeer beams at her, as upon a faith healer. Yes, even Pfeiffer is in love with her. I still — you guys, I still miss her face, but can I say again Frances, and on top of that Sweet Dreams and Tootsie, and what if I also add, Frances. So, it's all cool. (But is American Horror Story really "beautifully written"? Y'all tell me? It's not quite the impression I'd gotten, even from its delirious fans.)



8:28: Things moved too fast for me to mention that Felicity Huffman and William H. Macy charmed the room with their harmonic duet bit, upon intro'ing the category. Won themselves a round of applause. What is Felicity up to? Why haven't Desperate Housewives and Transamerica made more things happen for her? Eventually, it's going to be her birthday, and I'm not going to be sure what to watch. Thought I'd have more options by now?



8:29: Two absolutely priceless cutaways before. In the first, Emily Watson leapt into enthusiastic applause for Lange, and then realized she was only a few feet away from Evan Rachel Wood, a non-winning nominee in the same category, and she grimaced in embarrassment. Even better: Donald Gummer, Mr. Streep, was just sitting in his seat, minding his business, and Madonna bounced over to sit closer to him, and he just shot her down. That was a look.



8:32: Madonna just got into a semi-humorous blacktop knife-fight with Ricky Gervais, but before we address that...

BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM
I WANT: A Separation, because it's great, and I'm a Farhadi fan, and no Iranian movie has ever won.
I PREDICT: I'm not 100% confident about A Separation, but what would beat it? Jolie? Are they willing to be that transparent? (Although I hear her movie's good.)

VERDICT: A Separation! Jodie Foster is a huge fan, and Madonna's right up there, too. Shailene Woodley is not feeling that any moment is taking place. Asghar Farhadi, or "Fahardi," as some offstage announcers would have it, pays tribute to the Iranian people.



8:34: TV BEST ACTRESS (DRAMA)
I WANT: Madeleine Stowe, because welcome back, Kotter! Or, Mireille Enos, because I'm always reading people saying the meanest stuff about this series, in ways that imply to me I would like it. Plus, Patty Jenkins trickle-down.
I PREDICT: Claire Danes, because the Globes have been on her wavelength for a long time, and her reviews for this performance are kind of mind-blowing.

Dustin Hoffman looking a little frail? Madeleine Stowe looking as gorgeous as ever, which is gorgeous.

VERDICT: Claire Danes, who has vanquished such a completely Globes-friendly proposition in Madeleine Stowe that Danes must be a total juggernaut in the making. Claire's had her ups and downs, sort of, but she still takes Most Self-Possessed from just about everybody except Linney. (Although she's still only got three Globes. The Lange looks at this puny trifecta, and she sneers.)



8:39: So, the Madonna-Ricky thing. He snorted at the idea of her being "like a virgin," because again, he is the Crown Prince of fresh material, and she said, at the mic, "If I'm still like a virgin, Ricky, why don't you come over here and do something about it? I haven't kissed a girl in several years. On TV." I think I was in the same place Salma Hayek visibly was: I enjoy seeing somebody fire a slingshot at Gervais, but this seemed like ...not the thing. You can see how smoothly an exchange like this flows right into an onstage moment for Asghar Farhadi. It was silky smooth.



8:42: I'm confused how these Smash ads think they can get away with "introducing Katharine McPhee." Thank Goodness American Idol is such a microscopic, public-access show that only airs at 3:30am.



8:43: Emily Blunt looks stunning in yellow sequin, but don't you kind of wish she'd have popped out in some hideous bridesmaid's dress?



8:44: TV BEST ACTOR (COMEDY)
I WANT: I care so little that I think if I had a ballot here, I'd write in Nina Garcia, just for giggles. Or I'd cross out the name of the category, replace it with Biggest Asshat, and only then vote for Thomas Jane.
I PREDICT: Matt LeBlanc, because they liked the show enough to nominate it. Then again, they do enjoy the Peter Scolari Principle of propping up the under-sung co-lead to the famous guy (Jimmy Smits, Anthony Edwards, etc., though not, in fact, Peter Scolari), so maybe that looks good for Johnny Galecki.

Tina Fey and Jane Lynch have got the presenter thing so totally down.

VERDICT: Matt LeBlanc. That Natalie outside is going to be so confused that he won for this documentary! This late in the evening, you really learn whose hairstylist built their work to last. (Thomas Jane was carefully dressed by House of Toolbox.)



8:46 BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
I WANT: Jessica Chastain, because I have no problem voting for a body-of-work nomination when we're talking about the range of accomplishments within one year.
I PREDICT: Octavia Spencer, who I liked better the second time through The Help than the first (and, in truth, Chastain a little less than the first time I saw it). Still feels like something's not working in this lineup.

VERDICT: Octavia Spencer wins, and she gets her prize in a big ol' bag full of Bradley Cooper. Everyone's clapping for her and even on her while she makes her way up: Charlize, Julianne, Latifah, Maya, Paula, Janet, Melissa. They're all into it. Drops a Martin Luther King quote, and then hits her written list pretty hard. She's still looking like the finest lady here. Melissa McCarthy is weeping in the back. The Help table, including Viola's ex-linebacker husband, practically do the wave for Octavia.



8:52: So here is a graph of daily attendance at this blog. And we've still got an hour to go! Don't all of you be disappearing on me after this, though. Seriously, we've got a Diana Wynyard tribute coming up! Where else do you want to be? You think HuffPo is gonna be on that? (NBC is airing that commercial again about how you are inviting predators into your house with your digital camera. Just stop thinking your kid is cute! Knock that off!)



8:54: Reese is here, of course, to promo The Descendants, and to get a shout-out to her new film This Means War, and to wear that dress and that hair and makeup that themselves say, "That meant war, and girls, I won before you knew it was on." But even her little précis ("...a man and his philandering wife...") reminds me of some of what I hate about that movie. I wonder if they considered just trimming it to "a man and his comatose philanderer"?



8:56: Sidney Poitier gets the evening's first Standing O, so that Morgan Freeman can get the second. Poitier thinks Spencer Tracy, Laurence Olivier, Marlon Brando, and Canada Lee would be Morgan's biggest fans if they were here.



8:57: Morgan looks incredibly moved, incredibly, to get this testimony from Sidney Poitier, but it's an emotionally challenging bit, because Poitier does not strike one as enjoying incredibly good health. Helen Mirren tries to help out, with a mostly failed comic bit about Morgan not working with her often enough. (Unfortunate side effect is reminding a lot of people watching of RED's Best Picture nomination last year.) Here comes Morgan's reel. Shawshank, of course, gets the biggest offscreen cheer.



9:00: Here's Street Smart, in which Morgan and Kathy Baker are both tremendous, and which earned his first Oscar nomination, and which he named on the red carpet as his own favorite among his films, but almost no one talks about it anymore.



9:02: Morgan Freeman as a naked vampire taking a bubble-bath inside a casket on The Electric Company is something I had no idea I would ever see.



9:03: For his coronation, they go with the Daisy music, and beaming shots of Brad and Meryl and George. And Gerard Butler and Diane Ladd. Leo is embarrassed that his phone clearly buzzed in his pocket at the exact moment the ovation started. Speech starts with a better line to Mirren than she was given to deliver to him. His thanks to Sidney Poitier is superhumanly eloquent, even by Freeman's standards.



9:05: "Hey, Elton" suddenly feels like the funniest thing anybody could say. Ben Kingsley's wife is in his lap, pulling on his tie, and coming awfully close to Courtney Stodden territory, she's so excited about the Cecil B. DeMille award.



9:07: Remember when the DeMille presentation was 19 minutes long? Life has improved since then. But maybe they could find a golden mean? Feels like we rushed through that just the slightest bit. Mirren's patter ran as long as the clips.



9:08: White mint truffle. Oh, and here's that graph.



9:10: Robert Downey, Jr., whom we still love for breaking off a piece of Gervais right there on stage last year. He's stuck with a long list of the auteurs to whom the "daring and euphoric" The Artist pays tribute. These include John Ford and Billy Wilder. Obviously.



9:12: BEST DIRECTOR
I WANT: A recount. Honestly, people. What the hell. But if we must, we must, and it's an easy Michel Hazanavicius vote from me.
I PREDICT: Martin Scorsese, though the Globes don't split Picture and Director as much as they used to.

Angelina's doing the honors, in her sleek red/white number. Michel Hazanavicius is super stoked that she can say his name (although I would have thought an "ss" sound and not a "sh"?).

VERDICT: Martin Scorsese gets it. He thanks the HFPA for all their work on film preservation. Diane Ladd is still feeling the love, all these years after Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore. Pays tribute to one of his kids. Hits all the producers and a whole lot of the cast. His assistant director, too, which is a nice touch. Settles the SKOON-MAY-KER confusions once and for all.



9:16: TV BEST SERIES (COMEDY)
I WANT: Enlightened, just to get some Dern-Ladd Rambling Rose action up there on the stage. I've only actually seen a few episodes of Modern Family, a few clips of Glee, and nada of the others, so how could I judge?
I PREDICT: Modern Family, because nobody seems to get tired of it.

Ricky fires off a "Who can understand Antonio and Salma?" joke, and Antonio hits back with a full-on tirade in Spanish. Wish I didn't have to ask, but what'd he say?



9:17: It's Modern Family. Sofia Vergara and Steve Levitan pull off the only extended gag of the evening that's really, fully worked. And then we're back to Sofia's Diet Pepsi commercial, which is practically perspiring at this point. You guys, I'm not gonna buy it.



9:21: So, what we've got left are Dujardin, Artist, Davis/Streep, Pitt/Clooney, and Descendants/Hugo/Moneyball/Help.



9:23: You guys, Nathaniel obviously produced this show. Madonna next to Meryl. Madonna on stage, twice. Pfeiffer. Julianne. Nicole. Seriously, Nat. You're playing your hand.



9:25: BEST ACTOR (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
I WANT: Ryan Gosling, honestly. He's neck and neck with Dujardin, but his knack at comedy and his contentment within a rangy ensemble really surprised me. And again, if you're great multiple times in one year, I'm happy to give you credit for that.
I PREDICT: Jean Dujardin, who's so good in The Artist that I might start regretting what I just wrote at any moment.

Mark Wahlberg's effervescent sense of humor spills all over everybody. The room seems full of rainbows and unicorns.



9:26: VERDICT: Dujardin, of course, who lets us know that an agent once poo-poo'd his career because his face was too expressive. The camera cuts back to Charlize, who seems intent on proving that she was never turned down by an agent for precisely this problem. Seriously, when that gal wants to pull down The Mask, no one can touch her.



9:28: Julianne is still enough of a geek to be asking someone to take her photo with Colin Firth on an iPhone. I love her for this. A floating hand, connected to no body, is filling Viola's and Octavia's champagne flutes for what I'm suspecting is not the second time.



9:29: Because his face was too expressive.



9:30: I love that the other reaction shot we got for that admission was Madeleine Stowe's, who smiled widely, but was all, "Well, yeah, of course. The people who run this business have always been morons. Nothing surprises me."



9:31: And here's Queen Latifah (could it be a shout-out for The Help?) and then a pan over Table #10 (could it be a shout-out for The Help?) and then a shout-out to The Help (could it—yes.)



9:33: Is the foxy guy with Octavia Spencer or Emma Stone? He's between them, so there's no knowing. Ricky nails his first great joke about Colin Firth being a horrible racist and punching blind kittens. And Colin still ribs the host.



9:34: BEST ACTRESS (DRAMA)
I WANT: Viola Davis. I've said this a million times, but Viola figured out how to suit the incongruous, Touchstone Pictures plane of the movie while still telepathically transmitting the more serious, higher-stakes movie that The Help could have been in the right circumstances. She elevated it without seeming cut off from her co-stars or her dubious script (though I'm sure she fought some battles).
I PREDICT: Davis, though Streep or Mara would not surprise me. No matter who wins in the Viola/Meryl standoff, even if that same gal repeats at SAG, I still think the Oscar is hard to call.

Serious, real-talk applause for Viola, Rooney, and Meryl. Tilda Swinton laughs at how much lower she knows her decibel level is going to be, and is.



9:35: MERYL. Mouth kisses to her husband and to Colin Firth. Great Ricky Gervais joke. SHOUT-OUT TO ADEPERO ODUYE. And to MIA WASIKOWSKA. She doesn't nail either pronunciation, but the sentiment is amazing. Thanks "everyone in England who let me come over to their country and trample all over their history."



9:39: They start playing Meryl off. The world really is going to end in 2012. She ends, abruptly, with "I love you, Viola. You're my girl."



9:40: BEST PICTURE (MUSICAL/COMEDY)
I WANT: The Artist, which I'm eager to see again, but which enchanted me back in September, even when I could discern that it had peaks and valleys, for sure. Lotta peaks, people.
I PREDICT: The Artist, though it's exciting that Bridesmaids, which I like, and Midnight in Paris, which I don't, are really bonafide contenders and would win in a lot of years.

VERDICT: The Artist. More importantly, UGGIE IS HERE.



9:41: Piper Perabo is completely over The Artist. The woman sitting next to her goes, "Why?" Matthew Morrison makes a surprising skateboarding gesture.



9:42: A weird collision: the producer (Claude Berri's son, really??) having a big-time emotional moment, the rest of the people on stage and all the people in the audience having an Uggie moment, and the orchestra just waiting for no one. You guys, they played off Meryl.



9:43: I just want to make sure we are all clear that the hierarchy of importance goes like this: DRAMAS, LEADING MEN, COMEDIES, LEADING WOMEN. There should be no confusion about this. I'm pretty sure that when Jane Fonda came out to announce Best Picture (Musical/Comedy), she was trying to beckon Meryl back out to the mic to finish her speech.



9:46: The guy whom Tom Ripley strangled on the boat seems to be bedding everyone in Smash.



9:47: BEST ACTOR (DRAMA)
I WANT: Brad Pitt, by a landslide. I was a little cooler on Fassbender in Shame than others, I think Gosling was good in Ides but not up to his best level, and the other two I can't really deal with, Clooney even less than DiCaprio.
I PREDICT: Pitt, although a lot of arrows point to Clooney, including his insane satchel-ful of nominations in seemingly every category tonight. (Why didn't Glenn Close tip him off to write a tender ballad about calling your comatose wife a slutty bitch, but in a sensitive way?)

Natalie Portman hasn't just visibly shrunk down from last year's size. She has shrunk even since she tried on this dress. She is Nina again.

VERDICT: George Clooney, who again makes clear that he likes Brad Pitt even more than Meryl Streep likes Viola Davis, which I'm sure is very sweet. An unexpectedly graphic tribute to Michael Fassbender's appendages. ("Seriously, man, you could play golf with your hands behind your back.") Nothing for DiCaprio or Gosling, whom he directed. Guess they better start unbuttoning those flies? And then a thanks to Alexander Payne for making wonderful films.



9:52: You guys, I feel like this should have been a funnier live-blog! I am feeling like the My Week with Marilyn of live-bloggers. I was aiming for comedy, but I'm in some weird middle-zone. I think the fact that they only gave me one Abilify ad really cut into my mojo.



9:53: I have to admit I'm feeling really bummed about Brad and Viola. I know George just reminded us of the million zillion more important things in the world, but I'm still focused on these two.



9:54: BEST PICTURE (DRAMA)
I WANT: Moneyball, because the scenes have range, the direction breathes in ways you don't predict, and the shape of the whole thing is quirky without being cutesy in the slightest.
I PREDICT: The Descendants, because Yahweh is trying to capsize my unreasonable fixation on film awards. Given that Slumdog and King's Speech still didn't work, he's gonna need a bigger boat. (Yes, I know, King's Speech didn't win the Globe.)

Harrison Ford presenting, again, with his earring, because no one cherishes these events more than he does. Or indeed, cherishes this industry.



9:55: It's The Descendants, so it's official! My least favorite of the 104 new releases I saw this year is the winner of the Best Picture prize. The producers thank their "quarterback," George Clooney. The producer feels that this movie may "become a timeless movie, which it feels like to me."



9:57: They're playing off the Descendants producers, with three minutes left to go. What is the damn hurry?



9:58: As we fade out on a long, endless shot of a monumental jellyfish, which is actually a chandelier in the ballroom, Ricky tries his final line, "I hope you all enjoyed the gift-bags, and the food, and the gold—I hope that took your mind off the recession."



9:59: And after waffling on this issue alllllll night, NBC finally decides that Smash will be "introducing" Megan Hilty and Katharine McPhee.



10:00: Thanks for tuning in, everybody! Your official Quarterback and Homecoming Queen, who are also your co-Valedictorians, are still your co-Valedictorians. A Separation is still amazing. People who've won two Globes in the past still deserve a third, and the challenge is still open: explain to me in the comments what is special about The Descendants. If you can convince me, I'll tell Nathaniel, and he'll utilize his unsuspected influence to book all your favorite celebrities as next year's presenters!



10:01: Amaretto ganache.


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