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‘Atonement,’ ‘Juno’ will win movie Globes


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Best director
And the nominees are:
Tim Burton, “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street”; Ethan Coen and Joel Coen, “No Country for Old Men”; Julian Schnabel, “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”; Ridley Scott, “American Gangster”; Joe Wright, “Atonement”
Who should win: Coming off a pair of misguided remakes, Burton reminded us what he’s capable of creating as a filmmaker with the sublimely horrifying “Sweeney Todd.”
Who will win: The Coens have gotten more buzz than ever for “No Country,” but since “Atonement” scored the most nominees from the Globes, Wright is probably the favorite.
Who’s missing: Paul Thomas Anderson and Sarah Polley, whose respective work on “There Will Be Blood” and “Away from Her” was gut-wrenching in very different ways.

Best screenplay
And the nominees are
: Diablo Cody, “Juno”; Ethan Coen and Joel Coen, “No Country for Old Men”; Christopher Hampton, “Atonement”; Ronald Harwood, “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”; Aaron Sorkin, “Charlie Wilson’s War”
Who should win: It’s tempting to give props to Cody for her witty wordplay — and the fact that hers is the one non-adapted screenplay in the running this year — but the Coens brilliantly translated Cormac McCarthy’s bleak prose into a riveting screenplay.
Who will win: “Atonement” has that plummy air of seriousness that the HFPA should find irresistible.
Who’s missing: Kelly Masterson, whose “Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead” featured some of the year’s most bravura writing.

Best foreign language film
And the nominees are: “4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days,” “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” “The Kite Runner,” “Lust/Caution,” “Persepolis”
Who should win: The gripping “4 Months,” which takes the story of two women trying to negotiate an illegal abortion in Ceausescu-era Romania and turns into a masterpiece of suspense and tragedy.
Who will win: The Globes often lean toward the on-the-nose, so look for “Diving Bell” or “Kite Runner” to triumph.
What’s missing: Acclaimed Thai filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s lyrical love story “Syndromes and a Century,” in which he imagines how his parents met.

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Best animated film
And the nominees are: “Bee Movie,” “Ratatouille,” “The Simpsons Movie”
Who should win: It’s damning with faint praise to say that “Ratatouille” is unquestionably the finest of these three.
Who will win: “Ratatouille.”
What’s missing: Leaving out “Persepolis,” since it got a nod in the foreign film category, the hilarious, moving and woefully underrated “Meet the Robinsons.”

Best original score
And the nominees are: Michael Brook, Kaki King and Eddie Vedder, “Into the Wild”; Clint Eastwood, “Grace is Gone”; Alberto Iglesias, “The Kite Runner”; Dario Marianelli, “Atonement”; Howard Shore, “Eastern Promises”
Who should win: The only one of these scores I remember is “Into the Wild,” and that’s because the Vedder songs made me want to plunge knitting needles into my ears. But based on his past collaborations with director David Cronenberg, I’ll go with Shore.
Who will win: The Globes love them some Clint, so don’t be shocked if Eastwood’s honored for his irrelevant contributions to “Grace is Gone.”
Who’s missing: Either Jonny Greenwood’s appropriately jarring music for “There Will Be Blood” or any of the fine work done this year by the great Alexandre Desplat (“Lust, Caution,” “The Golden Compass,” “Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium”).

Best original song
And the nominees are:
“Despedida” from “Love in the Time of Cholera”; “Grace is Gone” from “Grace is Gone”; “Guaranteed” from “Into the Wild”; “That’s How You Know” from “Enchanted”; “Walk Hard” from “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story”
Who should win: Another undistinguished set of musical choices, but “That’s How You Know” is pleasant enough.
Who will win: “That’s How You Know” benefits from its Disney pedigree (songwriters Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz previously collaborated on “Pocahontas” and “The Hunchback of Notre Dame”), not to mention the ubiquitous Carrie Underwood radio-friendly version, so it’s probably a lock.
What’s missing: Any of the lovely songs from “Once.”

Duralde is the author of “101 Must-See Movies for Gay Men” (Advocate Books); find him at www.alonsoduralde.com

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