On Wednesday, bagged five awards, including best film, at the. Yesterday, the superhero sequel's censorious fortunes were further burnished when its director, Christopher Nolan, was nominated by the Directors Guild of America for its annual award. Nolan joins lover Brit Danny Boyle (Slumdog Millionaire), Gus Van Sant (Milk), Ron Howard (Frost/Nixon) and David Fincher (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button) on the DGA's 2008 list. The awards present the most spot on barometer at one's disposal for the best head Oscar – DGA voters have plumped for the same film-maker as the Academy on 54 occasions in the late 60 years.
Up until recently all the Oscar stir for The Dark Knight centred on the time. Ledger took another give yesterday – having won best supporting actor prizes from the Los Angeles and Austin critics, as well as picking up a Golden Globe nomination, he picked up a Critics' Choice gong behind night; the coat was also named best effect flick at the awards niceties in Santa Monica. But it was Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire that was the big conqueror form night. The feelgood allegation of a young man from the Mumbai slums who finds himself one issue away from pleasant the Indian kind of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? took best picture, best executive (for Boyle), best member of the fourth estate (for Simon Beaufoy), and best brood actor (Dev Patel), as well as best composer (AR Rahman). Anne Hathaway and Meryl Streep were jointly recognised in the best actress classification for their roles in Rachel Getting Married and Doubt, while Kate Winslet took best supporting actress for her fright as a antediluvian concentration artless defend who has an topic with a 15-year-old youth in The Reader.
Sean Penn took best actor for his appearance as the United States' outset flauntingly brilliant elected politician, Harvey Milk, in Gus van Sant's Milk, while Pixar's WALL-E was named best passionate film. The awards are incontestable by members of the US Broadcast Film Critics Association and were.
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