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Scorsese's
'Hugo'
leads
Oscars
with
Eleven
nominations
By
CHRISTY
LEMIRE
and
DAVID
GERMAIN
AP Movie
Writers
BEVERLY
HILLS,
CA -
Martin
Scorsese's
Paris
adventure
"Hugo"
leads
the
Academy
Awards
with 11
nominations,
among
them
best
picture
and the
latest
director
slot for
the
Oscar-winning
filmmaker.
Also
nominated
for best
picture
Tuesday:
the
silent
film
"The
Artist";
the
family
drama
"The
Descendants";
the
Sept. 11
tale
"Extremely
Loud &
Incredibly
Close";
the Deep
South
drama
"The
Help";
the
romantic
fantasy
"Midnight
in
Paris";
the
sports
tale "Moneyball";
the
family
chronicle
"The
Tree of
Life";
and the
World
War I
epic
"War
Horse."
The
nominations
set up a
best-picture
showdown
between
the top
films at
the
Golden
Globes:
best
musical
or
comedy
recipient
"The
Artist"
and best
drama
winner
"The
Descendants."
"The
Artist"
ran
second
with 10
nominations,
among
them
writing
and
directing
nominations
for
French
filmmaker
Michel
Hazanavicius,
a
best-actor
honor
for Jean
Dujardin
and a
supporting-actress
slot for
Berenice
Bejo.
Because
of a
rule
change
requiring
films to
receive
a
certain
number
of
first-place
votes,
the
best-picture
field
has only
nine
nominees
rather
than the
10 that
were in
the
running
the last
two
years.
Dujardin,
who won
the
Globe
for best
actor in
a
musical
or
comedy
as a
silent-era
star
whose
career
goes
kaput
with the
arrival
of
talking
pictures,
will be
up
against
Globe
dramatic
actor
winner
George
Clooney
for "The
Descendants,"
in which
the
Oscar-winning
superstar
plays a
dad
trying
to hold
his
Hawaiian
family
together
after a
boating
accident
puts his
wife in
a coma.
Other
best-actor
contenders
are:
Demian
Bechir
as an
immigrant
father
in "A
Better
Life";
Gary
Oldman
as
British
spymaster
George
Smiley
in
"Tinker
Tailor
Soldier
Spy";
and Brad
Pitt as
Oakland
A's
general
manager
Billy
Beane in
"Moneyball."
Globe
winners
Meryl
Streep
(best
dramatic
actress
as
Margaret
Thatcher
in "The
Iron
Lady")
and
Michelle
Williams
(best
musical
or
comedy
actress
as
Marilyn
Monroe
in "My
Week
with
Marilyn")
scored
Oscar
nominations
for best
actress.
Two-time
Oscar
winner
Streep
padded
her
record
as the
most-nominated
actress,
raising
her
total to
17
nominations,
five
more
than
Katharine
Hepburn
and Jack
Nicholson,
who are
tied for
second-place.
Streep
went
two-for-four
on her
first
nominations,
winning
supporting
actress
for
1979's
"Kramer
vs.
Kramer"
and best
actress
for
1982's
"Sophie's
Choice."
But she
has lost
her last
12
times,
and the
Globe
win for
her
spot-on
personification
of
Thatcher
looks
like her
best
chance
yet to
break
that
losing
streak.
Along
with
Streep
and
Williams,
best-actress
nominees
are:
Glenn
Close as
a 19th
century
Irishwoman
masquerading
as a
male
butler
in
"Albert
Nobbs";
Viola
Davis as
a black
maid
going
public
with
tales of
white
Southern
employers
in "The
Help";
and
Rooney
Mara as
a
traumatized,
vengeful
computer
genius
in "The
Girl
with the
Dragon
Tattoo."
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