'Boyhood'
gets Linklater nominated for Directors Guild Award
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[January 14, 2015]
By Mary Milliken
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Richard Linklater's 12 years of toiling on coming-of-age
tale "Boyhood" reaped a coveted nomination on Tuesday
for the top Directors Guild Award, which has correctly
predicted the best director Oscar for 10 of the last 11
years.
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Two-time DGA winner Clint Eastwood, 84, earned his fourth
nomination for outstanding directorial achievement for his Iraq
war film "American Sniper," while Alejandro G. Inarritu was
nominated for "Birdman," his second nod from the Directors Guild
of America for a feature film.
Rounding out the list of five were first-time DGA nominees
Morten Tyldum for "The Imitation Game" and Wes Anderson for "The
Grand Budapest Hotel."
"Boyhood," which follows a boy and his family and used the same
actors over a dozen years, won the 54-year-old Linklater his
first Golden Globe for best director on Sunday. The film also
won the coveted best drama Golden Globe, making it a frontrunner
for the Oscar best picture.
Inarritu, 51, was also considered a strong contender for
director awards for his first comedy, a surreal satire of show
business that appears to be filmed in one long take in the
cramped confines of a Broadway theater.
But the Mexican filmmaker's awards season fortunes took a blow
when Anderson's "The Grand Budapest Hotel" was a dark-horse
winner of the Golden Globe for best comedy or musical, boosting
the Oscar potential of the colorful period caper.
The surprise of the DGA list is Tyldum for "The Imitation Game,"
the British biopic of World War Two codebreaker Alan Turing,
played by Benedict Cumberbatch. The Norwegian director is known
for his 2011 thriller "Headhunters."
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The Academy Awards will be held on Feb. 22 and nominations will be
announced on Thursday. The DGA award will be handed out Feb. 7,
before Oscar voting concludes on Feb. 17.
Since 1948, there have been only seven occasions when the DGA award
winner has not gone on to win the corresponding Academy Award.
"Argo" director Ben Affleck won the DGA in 2013 but was not
nominated for the best director Oscar award, which was given to Ang
Lee for "Life of Pi."
One notable omission from the DGA list was "Selma" director Ava
DuVernay, a relative newcomer to directing whose work on the civil
rights drama made her the first African-American woman to be
nominated for a best director award at the Golden Globes.
(Editing by Eric Kelsey; Editing by David Gregorio)
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