“Up in the Air” leads Golden Globes with 6 nods

BEVERLY HILLS, (Reuters) – Film drama “Up in the  Air” soared away with six Golden Globe nominations yesterday,  more than any film, while Sandra Bullock and Meryl Streep  surprised Hollywood watchers with two nominations each for the  major awards show.

“Up in the Air,” starring George Clooney as a corporate  hatchet man forced to consider his own direction at mid-life,  earned nominations for Clooney as best actor, Jason Reitman for  best director and screenplay with co-writer Sheldon Turner, and  for both Anna Kendrick and Vera Farmiga as supporting actress.

Close behind was “Nine,” about the life and loves of an  Italian film director, with five nominations, including best  musical or comedy. Its stars, Daniel Day-Lewis and Marion  Cotillard, received nods for actor and actress in a musical or  comedy, respectively. Penelope Cruz landed in the supporting  actress group, and “Nine” received one nod for best song.

But Bullock and Streep had industry watchers buzzing at the  widely-watched awards shows.

Bullock scored nominations for best dramatic actress for  football film “The Blind Side” and actress in a musical or  comedy with relationship movie “The Proposal.” Streep will  compete against herself in the category for best actress in a  musical or comedy with two movies, “Julie & Julia” and “It’s  Complicated.”

Philip Berk, president of the Hollywood Foreign Press  Association which gives out the Golden Globes, said the  nominees epitomize “a fantastic year” for movies both at the  box office and in terms of quality.

The Golden Globes will be given out on January 17. The  annual awards are seen as a key indicator of which movies will  compete for the world’s top film honors, the Oscars, in March.

Science-fiction adventure “Avatar” earned four nominations,  including best drama, best director for James Cameron and  original song and movie score. Quentin Tarantino’s World War  Two fantasy, “Inglourious Basterds” also earned four nods:  drama, director, screenplay for Tarantino and supporting actor  for Christoph Waltz.

Rounding out the best film drama nominees were Iraq war  movie “The Hurt Locker” and urban drama “Precious: Based on the  Novel Push by Sapphire,” which each earned three nominations.

“Precious” landed newcomer Gabourey Sidibe in the category  for best actress and Mo’Nique in the supporting actress group,  while “Hurt Locker” brought a best director nomination to  Kathryn Bigelow and a screenplay nod for Mark Boal.

Joining “Nine” in the race for best movie musical or comedy  were culinary movie “Julie & Julia,” box office sensation “The  Hangover” and indie hit “(500) Days of Summer,” which claimed a  best actor in a comedy nod for its star, Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

Joining Clooney among nominees for best dramatic actor were  Jeff Bridges playing a down-and-out country singer in “Crazy  Heart,” Colin Firth as a man considering suicide in “A Single  Man,” Morgan Freeman playing Nelson Mandela in “Invictus” and  Tobey Maguire for “Brothers.”

In the group for best actor in a comedy or musical,  Gordon-Levitt and Day-Lewis will face competition from Matt  Damon in “The Informant!,” Robert Downey Jr. for “Sherlock  Holmes,” and Michael Stuhlberg for “A Serious Man.”

Along with Bullock and Sidibe, best dramatic actress nods  went to Helen Mirren for “The Last Station,” Emily Blunt in  “The Young Victoria” and Carey Mulligan with “An Education.”

Rounding out the list of nominees for best actress in a  musical or comedy was Julia Roberts in “Duplicity.”

Finally, foreign language film nominees were Italian movie  “Baaria,” Spanish director Pedro Almodovar’s “Broken Embraces,”  Chilean movie “The Maid,” French movie “A Prophet” and German  movie “The White Ribbon.”

The Golden Globe Awards, produced by Dick Clark  Productions, will air live in the United States on television  network NBC and play in various countries around the world.