Friday, November 25, 2011
'Iron Lady' Director Responds to Uproar Over Meryl Streep's 'Over-Emotional' Performance
This story appeared in the Dec. 2 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.our editor recommends'The Adventures of Tintin': What James Cameron Showed Spielberg and Jackson9 Things You Should Know About 'The Adventures of Tintin'Animated, Documentary and Foreign: 3 Key Oscar Categories AnalyzedRelated Topics•The Race•Golden Globes 2012 Pixar's animated movies have had a prize-winning run at the Golden Globe awards, but this year that run could very well come crashing to an end -- and all because of an intrepid young reporter called Tintin. When it comes to recognizing animated films in their own category, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association was actually late to the game. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences first gave out an Oscar for best animated feature in 2002. (Its first winner was DreamWorks Animation's Shrek.) It was five years before the HFPA, which had previously lumped animated movies into its comedy/musical category, decided to follow suit and designated a special Globe for animation. PHOTOS: Hollywood's Toy Wars For the past five years, ever since the HFPA created that new trophy, Pixar has ruled the competition. Cars, John Lasseter's celebration of America's automobile culture, took home the inaugural Globe for animation, defeating such contenders as Happy Feet, with its tap-dancing penguins, Monster House and Bee Movie. (That same year, at the Oscars, Happy Feet pulled off a surprise win by upstaging Cars.) And every year since then, another Pixar movie has upheld the tradition: Ratatouille, WALL-E, Up and Toy Story 3 all were winners. This year, Lasseter is back with the sequel Cars 2, in which Owen Wilson's Lightning McQueen and Larry the Cable Guy's Mater take a round-the-world drive in a plot tailor-made to appeal to the HFPA's international constituency. The song-and-dance birds of Antarctica will be back as well in their own sequel, director George Miller's Happy Feet Two. COVER STORY: Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson: The Titans Behind 'The Adventures of Tintin' Don't expect a replay of the 2006 race, though. There are plenty of other fierce contenders who are hoping for a nomination: DWA's Kung Fu Panda 2 and Puss in Boots, Fox's Rio, Paramount's Rango, Disney's Winnie the Pooh and Sony's Arthur Christmas among them. There also are a couple of new kids in toon town: Steven Spielberg, directing his first animated feature, The Adventures of Tintin, making use of the latest advances in motion capture and 3D cinematography with The Lord of the Rings maestro Peter Jackson at his side as producer. PHOTOS: 'Tintin,' 'Happy Feet Two' and 21 Other Awards Season Contenders Featuring Animals The HFPA, which has a demonstrated weakness for big marquee names, is going to find it hard to resist a filmmaker with that kind of pedigree. Plus, Tintin is based on the famous Herge comics character -- famous at least in Europe, from whence many HFPA members hail. Although Paramount won't open the movie in the United States until Dec. 21, almost a week after the Globe nominations are announced, it's already a growing hit around the world, where it grossed more than $160 million in its first two weeks of release via Sony and Paramount. So while Pixar may have the winning track record at the Globes, this year it's the challenger Tintin that is revving up to win the prize. PHOTO GALLERY: View Gallery Oscars 2012: The Early Signals Related Topics Golden Globes John Lasseter Steven Spielberg Pixar Cars 2 The Adventures of Tintin Golden Globes 2012 Awards Season Preview
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