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Shot on a modest $14 million budget, "Slumdog Millionaire" tells the alternately heartwarming and horrific tale of a street orphan in Mumbai whose pursuit of love carries him to triumph on India's version of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire." "Slumdog Millionaire" swept all four categories for which it was nominated at the Golden Globes, where it won best-picture over a field that included "Benjamin Button." The film's cast of unknowns was overlooked for acting nominations, but its Oscar categories include best-director for Danny Boyle and adapted screenplay for Simon Beaufoy. "I just have to keep remembering that the film nearly went straight to DVD," Beaufoy said, referring to a distribution hitch that nearly left the film without a theatrical run to qualify for the Oscars. "There was a week or two when it might never have appeared on a big screen in the United States, and the fact that it did, and Americans have taken it to their hearts is just fantastic." The best-picture field includes two 1970s tales of fallen political figures. "Frost/Nixon" stars best-actor nominee Frank Langella as the disgraced president in his battle of wits with TV interviewer David Frost. "Milk" features best-actor contender Sean Penn as the slain gay-rights pioneer. Along with Langella, Penn and Pitt, best-actor picks are Richard Jenkins in the cross-cultural drama "The Visitor" and Mickey Rourke in the sports-comeback story "The Wrestler." Joining Jolie in the best-actress field were Anne Hathaway for the family drama "Rachel Getting Married," Melissa Leo for the smuggling saga "Frozen River," Meryl Streep for the Roman Catholic tale "Doubt" and Kate Winslet for "The Reader." Winslet plays a woman having a fling with a teenager who encounters her again years later as she is on trial for Holocaust atrocities. At the Globes, Winslet was a dual winner, as dramatic actress for "Revolutionary Road" and supporting actress for "The Reader." But the Academy saw Winslet's turn in "The Reader" as a leading role, and one worthy of nomination. It was Winslet's sixth nomination. If she loses, she will tie the record of Deborah Kerr and Thelma Ritter for most nominations by an actress without a win. Stephen Daldry, a directing nominee for "The Reader," suspects Winslet will be going home with an Oscar. "I'm delighted for Kate," Daldry said. "I think she did two astonishing performances in
'Revolutionary Road' and in 'The Reader.' Whichever one the academy went for, I think it's her year. I think it's her turn." The 81st Oscars will be presented Feb. 22 at Hollywood's Kodak Theatre and broadcast on ABC. ___ On the Net:
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