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    Clooney, Pitt, Streep due at British film awards

    U.S director Martin Scorsese, right, chats to British actor John Hurt during a pre Bafta drinks reception for Scorsese at Claridges in London, Friday, Feb. 10, 2012. Scorsese receives the Bafta Fellowship award during the ceremony on Sunday. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan)

    LONDON (AP) — Spies were taking on silent stars in London Sunday, as espionage thriller "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" and mute movie "The Artist" faced off at the British Academy Film Awards.

    "The Artist" has 12 nominations and "Tinker Tailor" 11 for Britain's equivalent of the Oscars, with each up for best picture and director, and best-actor nods for the films' respective leading men, Jean Dujardin and Gary Oldman.

    Bookies gave "The Artist" the edge, making the French film odds-on favorite to continue its awards-season success. It has already won three Golden Globes, and has 10 Oscar nominations.

    George Clooney is the best-actor favorite for family drama "The Descendants," with Meryl Streep considered likely to win best actress for her much-praised performance as former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in "The Iron Lady."

    The British prizes, known as BAFTAs, are considered a strong indicator of likely success at Hollywood's Academy Awards, to be held on Feb. 26.

    Stars including Clooney, Streep, Brad Pitt, Jessica Chastain, Penelope Cruz, Colin Firth and Judi Dench were braving the London cold to walk the red carpet before a televised ceremony, hosted by comedian, writer and actor Stephen Fry, at the Royal Opera House.

    "The Help" star Viola Davis, a best-actress nominee, arrived in a pink Valentino "eco gown" made from recycled plastic bottles.

    Martin Scorsese's Parisian fantasy "Hugo" has nine BAFTA nominations, and there are six for moviemaking saga "My Week With Marilyn" and five each for Deep South drama "The Help" and equine adventure "War Horse."

    But many BAFTA-watchers are focused on the contest between French froth and British grit.

    "The Artist," a buoyant black-and-white Gallic take on the golden age of Hollywood, has become an unlikely Oscars favorite.

    "Tinker Tailor," an atmospheric adaptation of John le Carre's Cold War classic, has received rave reviews but has so far been snubbed during the U.S. awards season.

    Both films are up for best picture, along with "The Descendants," ''Drive" and "The Help."

    The best actor contest pits Clooney, Oldman and Dujardin against Brad Pitt for baseball drama "Moneyball" and Michael Fassbender for sex-addiction saga "Shame."

    The best actress category includes two performers playing real-life icons — Streep as Thatcher and Michelle Williams as Marilyn Monroe in "My Week With Marilyn."

    Co-star Kenneth Branagh praised Williams' "transcendent performance" in the film, which charts Monroe's experience making the 1957 comedy "The Prince and the Showgirl" with Laurence Olivier

    Branagh has a best supporting actor nomination for playing Olivier, and said the late actor was one of his inspirations.

    "I wrote to him once when I was 19 and asked for advice," Branagh said. "And he wrote back: 'Just have a bash and hope for the best.'"

    The other best-actress nominees are Berenice Bejo for "The Artist," Tilda Swinton for "We Need to Talk About Kevin" and Davis for "The Help."

    The multinational best-director contest pits Michel Hazanavicius for "The Artist" against Denmark's Nicolas Winding Refn, for the turbocharged "Drive," Sweden's Tomas Alfredson for "Tinker Tailor," Britain's Lynne Ramsay for "We Need to Talk About Kevin" and Scorsese for "Hugo."

    Scorsese is also nominated in the documentary category, for "George Harrison: Living in the Material World," and is due to receive a the BAFTA Fellowship for his "outstanding and exceptional" contribution to cinema in films including "Taxi Driver" and "Raging Bull."

    Veteran British actor John Hurt also is being honored for a career that includes memorable roles in "Elephant Man," ''The Naked Civil Servant" and "Alien."

    In recent years, the British awards have helped underdog films gain momentum for Hollywood success.

    In 2010, Danny Boyle's "Slumdog Millionaire" won seven BAFTAs, including best film; it went on to take eight Oscars. Last year "The King's Speech" won seven BAFTAs and four Oscars, including best picture.

    ___

    Online: http://www.bafta.org/film/awards

    Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

    British actors John Hurt and Sir Ben Kingsley pose for photographs during a pre Bafta drinks reception for director Martin Scorsese at Claridges in London, Friday, Feb. 10, 2012. Scorsese receives the Bafta Fellowship award during the ceremony on Sunday. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan)
     

    15 comments

    • Carl Fredricks  •  3 months ago
      Why hasn't anyone figured out that all these people do is travel to awards shows given by thenselves to present awards to each other. I think I will start an awards show for working stiffs and and give myself a large, stiff statue.
    • Wj  •  3 months ago
      I haven't seen any of those movies, lol. Has anyone else?
    • Film Shark  •  Boise, Idaho  •  3 months ago
      You guys are all jealous of their glamorous life styles. You need to look into the mirror and ask yourself, why do I come on the Internet just to hate on celebrities? I'm sorry all of your lives are dull. Get a life, trolls!
      • Fred 3 months ago
        I'm not jealous. You have to look yourself in the mirror and ask yourself, "Why am I looking in the mirror and talking to meself". What is your problem? I bet you think Whitney Houston was a beautiful, talented diva and not the low life drunk dopper that got lucky. Get a life Troll!
    • John  •  San Francisco, California  •  3 months ago
      Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a great movie. Gary Oldman deserves best actor award.
    • Michael  •  Roanoke, Virginia  •  3 months ago
      Who,,,WHO,,,really gives a rats butt about people that do fantasy and get paid for it ? If there weren't so many suckers out in the world they wouldn't make a dime.
    • BIGBLUENATION  •  3 months ago
      I didnt read the article. I just wish these people would go away.
    • The John  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
      Maybe Pitt can adopt a few people while he is over there.
    • The Shredder  •  Denver, Colorado  •  3 months ago
      Clooney thinks that he's the Cary Grant of his era....but he's just a douchetastic #$%$
      • MR 3 months ago
        He is not even close to the great Cary Grant!
      • jennie 3 months ago
        @ me,, who is.. :)
      • James 3 months ago
        I don't think the man himself would have a problem with it:

        "Everyone wants to be Cary Grant. Even I want to be Cary Grant." - Cary Grant
    • Fred  •  3 months ago
      They better do a tribute to Whinty Houston!!!!
    • Entesar  •  Al Urmån, Egypt  •  3 months ago
      مرحبا ممكن نتعرف عليكم اكتر مشروع مئة بالمئة
      • Melissa 3 months ago
        Habib, we don't know what you wrote.
      • oak 3 months ago
        E thats just your thought no one but NO one gives shti !!
      • James 3 months ago
        مرحبا ممكن نتعرف عليكم اكتر مشروع مئة بالمئة"

        That's what she said.
    • gj  •  Charlottesville, Virginia  •  3 months ago
      Where have all the actors gone.
      • V 3 months ago
        Britain.
      • Joanne 3 months ago
        There are plenty of great actors out there. Daniel Day-Lewis, Meryl Streep, Jodie Foster, Kevin Spacey, Morgan Freeman, Ralph Fiennes, Liam Neeson, George Clooney, Johnny Depp, Don Cheadle, Emma Thompson, Helen Mirren, Toni Colette..... God, how can you not see these people as amazing actors? I love movies, old and new, and the people I listed above hold their own with any of the old Great Actors of the past.
    • Jeffery  •  3 months ago
      Would love to some some cannabis then listen to Pitt and Clooney tell stories......"Don't condescend me man, i'll freak'n kill ya man"
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
      It's entirely possible that George Clooney is a homosexual.
      • btc 3 months ago
        Well, not entirely.
      • Tatiana E. 3 months ago
        And you care because...
      • Laurence H 3 months ago
        Tatiana, and you commented because......
    • 44mag  •  3 months ago
      I heard Clooney and Pitt are doing a remake of Brokeback Mountain.
    • btc  •  3 months ago
      Who cares!