No Country for Old Men and There Will Be Blood
led the Academy Award nominations, announced Tuesday,
with eight each, among them best picture and acting
honors for Javier Bardem and Daniel Day-Lewis-- but it
remained in doubt whether any stars would cross striking
writers' picket lines to attend the ceremony.
No Country for Old Men, a crime saga about a
drug deal gone bad, and There Will Be Blood, a
historical epic set in California's oil boom years, will
compete for best picture against the melancholy
romance Atonement, the pregnancy comedy Juno,
and the legal drama Michael Clayton.
Awards shows have
become casualties of the strike by writers, whose union
leaders say they will not allow members to work on the
Oscars. Nominees already are saying they would stay
away in support of writers if the strike lingers until
Oscar night February 24.
''I wouldn't do
that. I couldn't. I come from a tradition of not crossing
picket lines,'' said Tom Wilkinson, a supporting-actor
nominee for Michael Clayton.
Atonement and Michael Clayton had seven
nominations each, including best actor for George
Clooney in the title role of Clayton. The lead
players in Atonement, Keira Knightley and James
McAvoy, were shut out on nominations, however, with teenager
Saoirse Ronan the only performer nominated for that film,
for supporting actress.
Past Oscar winner
Cate Blanchett had two nominations, as best actress for
the historical pageant Elizabeth: The Golden
Age and supporting actress for the Bob Dylan tale I'm
Not There.
On strike since
November 5, the Writers Guild of America refused to let
its members work on the Golden Globes, which prompted stars
to avoid the show in solidarity. Globe organizers were
forced to scrap their glitzy telecast and instead
announce winners in a swift, humdrum news conference,
without anyone on hand to accept the prizes.
If guild leaders
follow through and refuse to let writers work on the
Oscars, it would leave nominees and other celebrities forced
to choose between attending the biggest event in show
business on February 24 or staying home to avoid
crossing picket lines.
''I would never
cross a picket line ever. I couldn't,'' said Tony Gilroy,
a directing nominee for Michael Clayton. ''I'm
a 20-year member of the Writers Guild. I think whatever they
work out is going to be one way or the other, but no,
I could never cross a picket line. I think there's a
lot of people who feel that way.''
Viggo Mortensen,
who received a best actor nomination for his performance
as a Russian mob member in Eastern Promises,
said he would not go if the strike is still on.
''But I have a
feeling they'll solve it,'' he said. ''I hope they do. I'm
sure my mom would like to see me on TV and so forth. But if
there's a strike, I'm not crossing the line.''
The acting
categories generally played out as expected -- with a few
surprises, including best actress nominee Laura Linney for
The Savages and best actor nominee Tommy Lee
Jones for In the Valley of Elah. Neither
performance had been high on the awards radar so far this
Oscar season.
Best actress
looks like a two-person duel between Julie Christie, an
Oscar winner for 1965's Darling, as a
woman succumbing to Alzheimer's in Away From
Her and Marion Cotillard as singer Edith Piaf in La
Vie En Rose. Both won Golden Globes, Christie
for dramatic actress, Cotillard for musical or comedy
actress. Yet they face strong competition from
Blanchett, Linney, and relative newcomer Ellen Page as
a whip-smart pregnant teen in Juno.
Day-Lewis, an
Oscar winner for 1989's My Left Foot,
grabbed another best actor nomination as a flamboyant oil
baron in There Will Be Blood, for which he
could emerge as the favorite.
Along with
Day-Lewis, Clooney, Mortensen, and Jones, the other nominee
was Johnny Depp, who won the Globe for musical or comedy
actor as the vengeful barber in Sweeney Todd.
With a Golden
Globe and universal acclaim for his performance as a
relentless killer, Bardem looks like the closest thing to a
front-runner this Oscar season, which is unusually
wide-open for best picture and other top
categories.
Bardem and
Wilkinson are up against Casey Affleck for The
Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert
Ford, Philip Seymour Hoffman for Charlie Wilson's
War, and Hal Holbrook for Into the Wild.
Joining Blanchett
and Ronan in the supporting actress category were Ruby
Dee for American Gangster, Amy Ryan for Gone Baby
Gone, and Tilda Swinton for Michael Clayton.
Snubbed along
with Knightley and McAvoy was Atonement director Joe
Wright. Besides Gilroy, the directing nominees were
Paul Thomas Anderson for There Will Be Blood, Ethan
Coen and Joel Coen for No Country for Old Men,
Jason Reitman for Juno, and Julian Schnabel for
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.
The Coens and
Anderson also were nominated for writing the screenplay
adaptations of their films.
The wide-open
awards season had left the field up in question, and some
other notable prospects were shut out, including past Oscar
winner Angelina Jolie for A Mighty Heart,
Helena Bonham Carter for Sweeney Todd, and
Emile Hirsch for Into the Wild. Sean Penn also
missed out on a nomination for directing Into the
Wild, as did Eddie Vedder, who was shut out in music
categories.
The fairy-tale
comedy Enchanted had three of the five best
song nominations.
Michael Moore --
who castigated President Bush over the Iraq war in his
best-documentary acceptance speech for Bowling for
Columbine in 2003 -- is back in Oscar contention with
his health-care documentary Sicko.
War-on-terror
documentaries dominated the category, with Sicko up
against No End in Sight, Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime
Experience, and Taxi to the Dark Side.
Even if the
strike lingers, Oscar organizers insist their show will go
on, with or without writers.
''We're dealing
with contingencies, but we're thrusting ahead. The point
is, we're going to have a show, and we're going to give
these incredible artists what they're due,'' said Sid
Ganis, president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts
and Sciences.
A glimmer of hope
arose late last week as the Directors Guild of America
reached a deal with producers for a new contract. Many in
Hollywood are counting on that deal to help
resuscitate negotiations between writers and
producers, who walked away from the table December 7.
If the two sides
settle their differences in time for the Oscars, the
ceremony would become a dual celebration, honoring the best
in Hollywood from the previous year and the end of a
season of labor discontent that has idled TV shows,
delayed some movies, and thrown thousands of
production workers into unemployment. (AP)