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Waxword

Waxword

Winslet globes 08 

   The Golden Globe awards may have recaptured their party spirit on Sunday after last year’s strike-induced cancellation, but by the end of the evening the awards flirted dangerously with national irrelevance – rewarding one small film seen by few moviegoers, and indulging long, earnest speeches by well-lauded celebrities.

   “Slumdog Millionaire,” the raucous, inspirational tale of love from India, came the closest to being the star of the moment, winning Best Picture, Best Director for Danny Boyle, Best Screenplay for Simon Beaufoy and best score. The film was distributed by Fox Searchlight.

    But the film won no acting awards, had no known movie stars in it and has taken in just $38 million worldwide.

The movies nominated for Best Picture have had a hard time connecting with audiences this year. Only one of the best picture nominees broke the $100 million barrier at the box office, “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” which won no awards. And only “Slumdog” seemed to win the hearts of Globe voters – those 85 or so foreign journalists and freelance writers who make up the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.

Whither Hollywood in 2009? With the industry no closer to finding a horse worth backing in the Oscar race, and the TV awards offering a replay of last year’s Emmys, with “30 Rock” and “John Adams” dominating, just as worrying was the lack of dramatic interest in the three-hour show in prime time on NBC.

For a moment, at least, it was interesting to watch Kate Winslet burst into tears over winning best actress and best supporting actress.

    But as the ceremony dragged on, even Martin Scorsese presenting a lifetime achievement award to Steven Spielberg could not lift the pace, or make the show feel like a necessary event. Spielberg spoke endlessly. Or it seemed endless. And what could be more interesting, entertaining – original, even - to watch Steven Spielberg finally recognized for his work?

Even the stars in the room appeared to have a hard time maintaining interested expressions as the director traced his life in film back to a train set in his basement. And come on, with all the money Dick Clark rakes in – couldn’t he have gotten together a decent montage of Spielberg’s work?

    It was a night in which the dresses were far more interesting to look at than anything up on stage. (Renee Zellweger appeared to wear her drapes, while Drew Barrymore was apparently channeling Marilyn Monroe shortly before her death.)

There will be a reckoning, I reckon. Sunday’s show came just a year after the Golden Globes ratings hit a historic low as the show was replaced by a bare-bones broadcast announcing the winners, due to the Writers Guild Strike. This year, despite the bottles of champagne visible on the dinner tables, no one seemed drunk or unhinged. It was left to Mickey Rourke to provide an edgy moment when he thanked his agent David Unger “for having the balls” to represent him.

A reminder: the Globes ratings plunged to 5.8 million in 2008, after a high of 20 million viewers in 2007, according to Nielsen ratings. This year? Anyone’s guess.

But the gravy train rolls on for the Hollywood Foreign Press. As Ricky Gervais deadpanned: “That’s the last time I have sex with 200 middle-aged journalists.” The Foreign Press is smaller in number, and on average older in age than that, as Hollywood insiders know well. Poor Ricky.

Published on Mon. January 12th, 2009 at 12:14AM | Link | Email | Comments (0) |
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Am I the only person confused at the embarrassing news that the Motion Picture & Television Fund had run out of money and had to close its long term care and acute care facility in Woodland Hills? This means 100 elderly sick people are being turned out on the street, a third of the staff fired, a hospital shut down.

Published on Fri. January 16th, 2009 at 7:54PM | Link | Email | Comments (1) |
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Here’s the journey, and here’s the moment of arrival, and here we all stand together at the threshold of opportunity. An inauguration. Change has arrived. Barack Obama is our president. This man, so young and untested, so average in height, and slight of build, is telling us – he is showing us by his existence -- that America can become the place it has always intended to be.

KEYWORDS change | Obama
Published on Tue. January 20th, 2009 at 8:20PM | Link | Email | Comments (0) |
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Welcome to TheWrap. A year ago I left The New York Times with a sinking feeling about what was happening to professional journalism.    Today we launch with great optimism what I hope will become an exciting new space to cover Hollywood in the digital age. TheWrap seeks to use the myriad tools of the web to marry top quality journalism – breaking news, trends, features, interviews – with the input of the talented and sophisticated community that creates the world's popular culture.    The time is fortuitous.

Published on Mon. January 26th, 2009 at 12:26AM | Link | Email | Comments (8) |
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Published on Tue. January 27th, 2009 at 10:53AM | Link | Email | Comments (0) |
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Hey Defamer! You caught us!

(See: 'The Wrap' Launch Marred By Rumor-Downgrades, Sandwich Confusion)

Day Two, it seems that Defamer has investigated The Wrap via this thing called "the Google" - way popular searchy thing - and learned that we are actually a burrito chain in Cambridge, Mass.

Published on Tue. January 27th, 2009 at 4:03PM | Link | Email | Comments (0) |
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Well, I'm not exactly sure what this means, but it sounds like a good thing. After just two days live, TheWrap.Com has been nominated for an award! A group called AlwaysOn has nominated TheWrap for its OnHollywood 100 list, which "honors the top emerging digital entertainment companies that are creating new opportunities, content strategies and monetization schemes in the video, music, gaming, search, and mobile industries."

Awards are given out in April in West Hollywood.

Possibly we could win the newest-kid-on-the-block award.

Published on Wed. January 28th, 2009 at 12:19PM | Link | Email | Comments (1) |
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Hi everyone, we hear your pain about the Comments problem. We are in the midst of undoing the registration requirement to make it a lot simpler to comment.

Thanks for your patience, and in the meantime, if you send us a comment for a specific article or post through the "Tell Us Something" button in the upper right of the page, we'll post it manually to the article. Good motivation for us to get it changed.

Thanks for bearing with us,

S.

KEYWORDS comments | The Wrap | thewrap
Published on Thu. January 29th, 2009 at 10:55AM | Link | Email | Comments (1) |
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In response to requests from readers, we've turned off the registration requirement to contribute to comments, so feel free to comment at will. Please bear in mind we will not be moderating comments, so we ask any and all to remain civil in their discourse. 

Also, thanks to all for the huge interest in our Alan Rosenberg interview today. It has been picked up by some a few hundred related sites.

many thanks,

Sharon.

Published on Thu. January 29th, 2009 at 8:17PM | Link | Email | Comments (2) |
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