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Focus and Paramount Vantage scored 11 nominations each
Thursday. But Focus also could boast the dominant film,
"Atonement," with its seven nominations. In addition, it
fielded "Eastern Promises" (three) and "Lust, Caution" (one).
And that's not counting Focus' stake in Paramount Vantage's
"Into the Wild," for which the company is handling non-English
international rights. But then, who's counting? "I'm back from Taipei and I'm on such a high," said Focus
Features CEO James Schamus, who co-wrote and executive produced
Ang Lee's "Lust," which just won seven Golden Horse awards in
the director's homeland. Focus came out of the awards gate slowly this year, gaining
little traction with such hopefuls as "Evening," "Reservation
Road" and "Talk to Me." But a careful rollout strategy for
"Atonement" and a late surge for the dark-horse thriller
"Eastern Promises" as well as "Lust" have put it in a pole
position. "Today is a massive sweep," Schamus said. The nominations also restore the company to its awards
luster of two years ago, when it scored 12 Golden Globe
nominations, including seven for "Brokeback Mountain" and two
for "Pride & Prejudice," from "Atonement" director Joe Wright. "It's a mistake to believe any one company can produce an
awards-worthy lineup," Schamus said. "It's the company you keep
-- great directors and great producers." But the company also knows that a long race lies ahead of
the January 13 Globes and the February 24 Oscars: Two years ago
"Brokeback" was an early favorite for the best picture Oscar --
it won best drama at the Globes -- but it lost the big one to
"Crash" at the Oscars. "Atonement," which opened in limited release December 7, is
now positioned to ride a Globes rush at the box office. "Lust,"
possibly hampered by its NC-17 rating, has grossed just $4.3
million domestically to date, but Schamus noted the rating
won't pose any problem for its January DVD release. And
"Promises" producer Paul Webster said that despite that film's
$17 million gross since it bowed November 4, the recognition
will give the film "a new lease on life." Reuters/Hollywood Reporter |