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'Strange little comedy' hits home with voters

The British-produced 'In Bruges,' about two hit men on the lam, gets a surprising three major nominations.

GOLDEN GLOBES

December 12, 2008|Chris Lee

Call it the luck of the Irish.

Since hitting theaters in February, "In Bruges" has not been the toast of award season -- the pitch-black comedic thriller has been more like the season's half-finished drink left sitting on the bar. The movie turned up on nary an Oscar prognosticator's year-end list and, more tellingly, remained absent from Hollywood's traditional "for your consideration" politicking. Moreover, "In Bruges" reaped less than $8 million at the box office and has flown under the radar of all but the most indie-attuned American movie lovers after premiering as the opening night selection at this year's Sundance Film Festival. But on Thursday, the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. honored the low-budget, British-produced film with three nominations in marquee categories.


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Its stars, Irish movie icons Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson, will compete against each other for best performance by an actor in a motion picture comedy or musical. And "In Bruges"-- which follows Farrell and Gleeson as two foul-mouthed Irish hit men hiding out in Bruges, Belgium's most perfectly preserved medieval city, after a botched job -- was nominated for best motion picture comedy or musical, beating out such higher-profile fare as "Sex and the City" and the Dustin Hoffman-Emma Thompson romantic comedy "Last Chance Harvey."

The nominations were a surprise not only to entertainment industry observers but also inside the corridors of "In Bruges" distributor, Focus Features. Even the movie's producer and its marquee star admitted being flabbergasted by the news.

"I didn't see it coming! Not even as a dark horse," Farrell said Thursday, speaking from the deck of his Los Angeles home. "I was really surprised. The fact that it showed so early in the year and had such a lukewarm reaction financially -- it didn't get seen by that many people -- it's a testament to [director Martin McDonagh] and to good filmmaking that the film seemed to strike a chord with the voters."

McDonagh, the acclaimed Irish playwright responsible for "The Pillow Man" and "The Lieutenant of Inishmore," made his feature debut with "In Bruges." In a statement issued from New York, where he is mounting a new production, McDonagh said he felt "glad that our strange little comedy of mayhem and redemption has been recognized for the superlative performances of Colin and Brendan."

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