Epic
musical “Les Miserables” and boy-meets-tiger saga “Life of Pi” received
nine nominations each Wednesday for Britain’s equivalent of the Oscars.
James Bond adventure “Skyfall” got eight — rare awards recognition for
an action movie — and Iran hostage thriller “Argo” took seven.
“Lincoln”
focuses on the last months in the life of U.S. President Abraham
Lincoln, as he struggled to end the Civil War and pass a constitutional
amendment banning slavery.
Britain’s
Daniel Day-Lewis is nominated for leading actor for his uncanny
embodiment of the iconic president, and there are supporting nominations
for Sally Field as his wife Mary Todd Lincoln and Tommy Lee Jones as
abolitionist firebrand Thaddeus Stevens.
The
best picture nominees are “Lincoln,” '‘Les Miserables,” '‘Life of Pi,”
'‘Argo” and Osama bin Laden thriller “Zero Dark Thirty.”
“Les
Miserables” is also a contender in the separate category of best
British film, alongside “Anna Karenina,” '‘The Best Exotic Marigold
Hotel,” '‘Seven Psychopaths” and “Skyfall.”
“Les
Mis” producer Tim Bevan said he was pleased with the movie’s nine
nominations, but surprised director Tom Hooper didn’t make the
shortlist.
“Steven Spielberg
wasn’t nominated for best director for ‘Lincoln,’ which tops the list,
so it just goes to show how wide open it is this year,” he said.
Ben
Affleck is nominated both as director of “Argo” and as its leading
actor. The other male acting contenders are Day-Lewis, Bradley Cooper
for"Silver Linings Playbook,” Hugh Jackman for “Les Miserables” and
Joaquin Phoenix for “The Master.”
“Skyfall”
star Daniel Craig was snubbed, but the film received supporting acting
nominations for Judi Dench’s spy chief and Javier Bardem’s
scene-stealing baddie.
The
best-actress shortlist includes 85-year-old “Amour” star Emmanuelle Riva
— who was nominated for the same prize 52 years ago for “Hiroshima, Mon
Amour” — Jennifer Lawrence for “Silver Linings Playbook,” Jessica
Chastain for “Zero Dark Thirty,” Marion Cotillard for “Rust and Bone”
and Helen Mirren for “Hitchcock.”
Mirren said it had been wonderful to play Hitchcock’s wife in Sacha Gervasi’s film.
“Alma
Reville was more than Hitchcock’s wife, in many ways she was his muse,
his assistant, his editor and more, and I am proud to have had the
opportunity to portray her,” Mirren said.
Besides
Affleck, the heavyweight best-director list includes, Michael Haneke
for Cannes Film Festival prize-winner “Amour,” Quentin Tarantino for
“Django Unchained,” Ang Lee for “Life of Pi” and Kathryn Bigelow for
“Zero Dark Thirty.”
Poignant
old-age portrait “Amour” is up for best foreign-language film, along
with Norway’s “Headhunters,” Denmark’s “The Hunt” and French films “Rust
and Bone” and “Untouchable.”
In
recent years, the British awards, known as BAFTAs, have helped underdog
films including “Slumdog Millionaire,” '‘The King’s Speech” and “The
Artist” gain momentum for Oscars success.
The winners will be announced at a ceremony in London on Feb. 10, two weeks before the Hollywood awards.

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