L.A. Times guy Rene Lynch is reporting that two significant Golden Globes parties — HBO and Warner Bros./In Style — have pulled the plug, and that the other big parties are expected to “follow suit.” So the whole thing is kaputski. The ’08 Globes will be a press conference, a one-day news cycle and that’s all. Phffft.
Day: January 7, 2008
40th anniversary approaching
Ten months shy of a 40th anniversary. The realism — crashing car metal, wild sideway skids, flying hubcaps — is awesome. The superb hand-held camerawork and knowing it’s absolutely real (as far as that concept goes) is half the fun. That even the high-level fakery that David Fincher used in Zodiac (which you can’t spot) isn’t part of it. Seen it 20 times; ready for another 20.
At your feet or at your throat
“The media is either at your feet or at your throat.” — MSNBC commentator Pat Buchanan speaking earlier this afternoon during a discussion of the media pile-on that Hillary Clinton is now suffering through. Deservedly, I would add.
Benicio as Che

An all-but-certain Best Actor contender for the 2008 Oscar Awards for his work in The Argentine and Guerilla. This will happen in part as a makeup for everyone ignoring Mr. Del Toro’s landmark performance in Things We Lost in the Fire. If I’m wrong I’ll eat my Beatle boot next year at this time, Werner Herzog-style.
Official HFPA cancellation of Golden Globes
A couple of hours ago the Hollywood Foreign Press association officially confirmed that the 1.13 Golden Globes awards ceremony has been scrapped. Instead a news conference will be aired at 6 pm Pacific to announce the winners in 25 film and TV categories, to be covered live by NBC. And as the clock ticks, the town wonders — what will become of the Oscars if a WGA strike settlement doesn’t happen?
Hubbard’s frozen sperm
I couldn’t help but chuckle at the Rosemary’s Baby speculation in Andrew Morton‘s Tom Cruise: An Unauthorized Biography, to wit: that Suri Cruise is actually the daughter of the late L. Ron Hubbard as a result of Katie Holmes having been “impregnated with Hubbard’s frozen sperm.”
This is one of those rumors that sounds so deranged, it’s classic. It’s like something out of a horror film. It made me imagine the Scientology fertilization ceremony in which Holmes receives Hubbard’s seed, the high officials wearing silk robes and chanting like they do in that orgy scene in Eyes Wide Shut. This rumor, I feel, is “better” — more vivid, more imaginative — than Richard Gere‘s gerbil, better than the body of Walt Disney being in cryogenic cold storage…it belongs to the ages.
Morton doesn’t claim the story is actually true. He’s said that Scientology insiders are muttering about it, whatever that means. Probably nothing.
Ludivine Sagnier photos
Photos from that Ludivine Sagnier French Playboy photo spread are now online. Thanks to both Alfred Ramirez and Awards Daily‘s Sasha Stone for passing along the link.
Van Airsdale meets von Donnersmarck
The Reeler‘s Stu van Airsdale had a chat at last night’s New York Film Critics Circle awards ceremony with The Lives of Others director Florian Henckle von Donnersmarck about There Will Be Blood.
The German director “was asked if he was a Blood man or No Country man. He said he’d only seen the first few minutes of the Coens’ film with his wife before the graphic violence compelled her to the exits with him in tow. It made him uncomfortable as well; he preferred the more psychological permutations of brutality spaced throughout There Will Be Blood.
“I can’t judge based on five minutes of the movie,” he said, “but I think it’ll be impossible to outdo it in my heart. It’s a film for film history. I’m in the Academy now, so PTA has my vote. Is he here? Paul Thomas Anderson? Have you seen him?”
No, van Airsdale said, but Daniel Day-Lewis would be there eventually. And when the actor did arrive, both to present Javier Bardem‘s supporting actor prize for No Country and collect his own Best Actor award for Blood, von Donnersmarck indeed cornered him while the rest of the room waited for a piece of him.”
Bad times for indie flicks
“These are sobering times for the independent film industry,” Hollywood Reporter guy Gregg Goldstein has written. “Box-office revenue for films from indie distributors and specialty divisions dropped 11.9% from $1.32 billion in 2006 to $1.16 billion in 2007, while the number of indies in theaters increased from 501 to 530. Even more disturbing, only 16 of the films grossed more than $20 million (nearly half of them by a slim margin), down from 20 in 2006.”
Is Deakins in trouble?
Does Roger Deakins getting not one but two American Society of Cinematographers nominations today — for his work on No Country for Old Men and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford — mean the vote will be split in half and that There Will Be Blood‘s Robert Elswit will take the award?
Janusz “milky white light” Kaminski won’t win for his Diving Bell and the Butterfly work (there are legions of milky-white-light haters out there…we all meet at the Sportsmen’s Lodge on Wednesday evenings) and Seamus McGarvey‘s Atonement work is off the radar because Atonement is off the radar because it’s imploding like the Clinton campaign.
Hillary Clinton Wash. Post
A clever piece by the Washington Post‘s Akira Hakuta about a recent Hillary Clinton appearance in New Hampshire… starting out fierce, ending up limp.
