
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. — Todd Haynes 1950s affair “Carol” landed a arch 5 nominations, including best affecting picture, in nominations for the 73rd anniversary Golden Globes.
Hollywood Foreign Press Association's nominations, appear Thursday in Beverly Hills, California, advance nods about to a boundless field. Surging was Adam McKay's accounts absurdity “The Big Short,” which becoming four nominations, including best picture, comedy.
Also with four nods is Alejandro Inarritu's aftereffect to his Oscar-winning “Birdman”: the borderland ballsy “The Revenant,” which was nominated for best picture, drama, and best amateur for Leonardo DiCaprio. A four-time Oscar nominee, DiCaprio — a ancient Globe champ — is gunning for his aboriginal Academy Award.
Tied with four is the Aaron Sorkin-scripted “Steve Jobs,” admitting it bootless to accompany the best account nominees. Forth with “Carol” and “The Revenant,” they are: “Mad Max: Fury Road,” ''Room” and “Spotlight.”
Streaming alternation from Netflix, Amazon and Hulu bedeviled the TV awards, which jumped all over the dial. Six shows angry for the a lot of nominations: “Fargo,” ''Mr. Robot,” ''Outlander,” ''Transparent,” ''American Crime” and “Wolf Hall.”

After the Screen Actors Guild Awards anesthetized over Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo on Wednesday, the Globes did, too. Ruffalo, however, was nominated for best amateur in a ball for his achievement as a bipolar ancestor in “Infinitely Polar Bear.”
Most of the accepted contenders came abroad with something to appearance from the Globes, including the accurate amplitude chance “The Martian” (including nods for brilliant Matt Damon and administrator Ridley Scott), David O. Russell's dame account “Joy” (best picture, ball and best extra Jennifer Lawrence), George Miller's apocalyptic antic “Mad Max: Fury Road” (including best administrator for Miller) and “Room,” the Emma Donoghue atypical adjustment “Room,” starring Brie Larson (nominated for best actress, drama) as a bound mother.
Left abundantly on the alfresco were Steven Spielberg's Cold War abstruseness “Bridge of Spies,” which was alone nominated for Mark Rylance's acknowledging performance; the Irish immigrant ball “Brooklyn,” just nominated for Saoirse Ronan's arch performance; and “Straight Outta Compton,” the accepted N.W.A biopic, which landed annihilation the day afterwards the SAG Awards gave it a best ensemble nomination.
Will Smith, whose accessible “Concussion” has fatigued account for its delineation of arch agony in football, abutting the best actor, drama, nominees. Aswell nominated were Michael Fassbender (“Steve Jobs”), Eddie Redmayne (“The Danish Girl”), DiCaprio and Bryan Cranston (“Trumbo”). Apparently displaced was Johnny Depp's arctic Whitey Bulger in “Black Mass.”
Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara, the two stars of the Patricia Highsmith adaption “Carol,” awash the best actress, drama, class forth with Larson, Ronan and Alicia Vikander (“The Danish Girl”).
Though some ambiguous class decisions larboard less-comedic films aggressive for best ball or musical, two of comedy's top stars will blast the decidedly atramentous awards season: Melissa McCarthy and Amy Schumer. Both were nominated for best extra in a comedy, and their films “Spy” and “Trainwreck,” appropriately will attempt for best comedic film.

Irish-Canadian columnist Emma Donoghue best up a best cine choice for “Room.”
The London, Ont.-based Dublin built-in won the Rogers Writers’ Trust Fiction Prize and was a finalist for the Man Booker Prize and a Governor General’s Literary Accolade for 2010’s “Room.”
The agonizing atypical is about a adolescent boy captivated bound in a afford with his mother. The adolescent has no abstraction there’s a apple alfresco that shed.
The blur adjustment won the People’s Choice Accolade at the Toronto International Blur Festival, area it anon began breeding awards buzz.
“Room” aswell best up Golden Globe nominations for best big-screen ball and best blur extra in a ball for Bree Larson, who plays the child’s mother.
In the best activated blur category, the Charlie Kauffman-scripted, stop-motion ball “Anomalisa” slotted in alongside a quartet of added family-friendly releases: “Inside Out,” ''The Good Dinosaur,” ''The Peanuts Movie” and “Shaun the Sheep Movie.”
Ricky Gervais will acknowledgment as host for the Globes on Jan. 10. His third time in the gig follows three beeline years of Tina Fey and Amy Poehler as hosts. Last year's NBC advertisement biconcave hardly from 2013's 10-year high, cartoon 19.3 actor viewers. Best ball went to Richard Linklater's “Boyhood,” while Wes Anderson's “Grand Budapest Hotel” captured the ball category.
The blur nominees are:
Picture, Drama: “Carol,” ''Mad Max: Fury Road,” ''The Revenant,” ''Room,” ''Spotlight.”
Picture, Agreeable or Comedy: “The Big Short,” ''Joy,” ''The Martian,” ''Spy,” ''Trainwreck.”
Actor, Drama: Bryan Cranston, “Trumbo”; Leonardo DiCaprio, “The Revenant”; Michael Fassbender, “Steve Jobs”; Eddie Redmayne, “The Danish Girl”; Will Smith, “Concussion.”
Actress, Drama: Cate Blanchett, “Carol”; Brie Larson, “Room”; Rooney Mara, “Carol”; Saoirse Ronan, “Brooklyn”; Alicia Vikander, “The Danish Girl.”
Director: Todd Haynes, “Carol”; Alejandro Inarritu, “The Revenant”; Tom McCarthy, “Spotlight”; George Miller, “Mad Max: Fury Road”; Ridley Scott, “The Martian.”
Actor, Agreeable or Comedy: Christian Bale, “The Big Short”; Steve Carell, “The Big Short”; Matt Damon, “The Martian”; Al Pacino, “Danny Collins”; Mark Ruffalo, “Infinitely Polar Bear.”
Actress, Agreeable or Comedy: Jennifer Lawrence, “Joy”; Melissa McCarthy, “Spy”; Amy Schumer, “Trainwreck”; Maggie Smith, “The Lady in the Van”; Lily Tomlin, “Grandma.”
Supporting Actor: Paul Dano, “Love & Mercy”; Idris Elba, “Beasts of No Nation”; Mark Rylance, “Bridge of Spies”; Michael Shannon, “99 Homes”; Sylvester Stallone, “Creed.”
Supporting Actress: Jane Fonda, “Youth”; Jennifer Jason Leigh, “The Hateful Eight”; Helen Mirren, “Trumbo”; Alicia Vikander, “Ex Machina”; Kate Winslet, “Steve Jobs.”
Foreign Language: “The Brand New Testament,” ''The Club,” ''The Fencer,” ''Mustang,” ''Son of Saul.”
Animated Film: “Anomalisa,” ''The Good Dinosaur,” ''Inside Out,” ''The Peanuts Movie,” ''Shaun the Sheep Movie.”
Screenplay: Emma Donoghue, “Room”; Tom McCarthy, Josh Singer, “Spotlight”; Charles Randolph, Adam McKay, “The Big Short”; Aaron Sorkin, “Steve Jobs”; Quentin Tarantino, “The Hateful Eight.”
Original Score: Cartner Burwell, “Carol”; Alexandre Desplat, “The Danish Girl”; Ennio Morricone, “The Hateful Eight”; Daniel Pemberton, “Steve Jobs”; Ryuichi Sakamoto, “Alva Noto.”
Original Song: “Love Me Like You Do” (music and lyrics by Max Martin, Savan Kotecha, Ali Payami, Ilya Salmanzadeh), “Fifty Shades of Grey”; “One Kind of Love” (music and lyrics by Brian Wilson, Scott Bennett), “Love & Mercy”; “See You Again” (music and lyrics by Justin Franks, Andrew Cedar, Charlie Puth, Cameron Thomaz), “Furious 7”; “Simple Song #3” (music and lyrics by David Lang), “Youth”; “Writing's on the Wall” (music and lyrics by Sam Smith, Jimmy Napes), “Spectre.”
The television nominations are:
Series, Drama: “Empire,” ''Mr. Robot,” ''Game of Thrones,” ''Outlander,” ''Narcos.”
Actor, Drama: Liev Schreiber, “Ray Donovan”; Wagner Moura, “Narcos”; Bob Odenkirk, “Better Call Saul”; Rami Malek, “Mr. Robot”; Jon Hamm, “Mad Men.”
Actress, Drama: Taraji P. Henson, “Empire”; Viola Davis, “How to Get Abroad With Murder”; Robin Wright, “House of Cards”; Caitriona Balfe, “Outlander”; Eva Green, “Penny Dreadful.”
Series, Agreeable or Comedy: “Orange is the New Black,” ''Silicon Valley,” ''Transparent,” ''Veep,” ''Casual,” ''Mozart in the Jungle.”
Actor, Agreeable or Comedy: Jeffrey Tambor, “Transparent”; Aziz Ansari, “Master of None”; Rob Lowe, “The Grinder”; Patrick Stewart, “Blunt Talk”; Gael Garcia Bernal, “Mozart in the Jungle.”
Actress, Agreeable or Comedy: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, “Veep”; Gina Rodriguez, “Jane the Virgin”; Lily Tomlin, “Grace and Frankie”; Jamie Lee Curtis, “Scream Queens”; Rachel Bloom, “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.”
Actor, Movie or Limited Series: Oscar Isaac, “Show Me a Hero”; Patrick Wilson, “Fargo”; Idris Elba, “Luther”; David Oyelowo, “Nightingale”; Mark Rylance, “Wolf Hall.”
Actress, Movie or Limited Series: Kirsten Dunst, “Fargo”; Lady Gaga, “American Horror Story: Hotel”; Sarah Hay, “Flesh & Bone”; Felicity Huffman, “American Crime”; Queen Latifah. “Bessie.”
Supporting Actor, Series, Limited Alternation or TV Movie: Damian Lewis, “Wolf Hall”; Christian Slater, “Mr. Robot”; Alan Cumming, “The Good Wife”; Ben Mendelsohn, “Bloodline”; Tobias Menzies, “Outlander.”
Supporting Actress, Series, Limited Alternation or TV Movie: Regina King, “American Crime”; Uzo Aduba, “Orange is the New Black”; Joanne Froggatt, “Downton Abbey”; Maura Tierney, “The Affair”; Judith Light, “Transparent.”
Movie or Limited Series: “Fargo,” ''American Crime,” ''American Horror Story: Hotel,” ''Wolf Hall,” ''Flesh & Bone.”

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