Light comedies and dark dramas: Golden Globe noms range from laughter to tears

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A loose and cheeky tone is typical for the Golden Globes. Yet Hollywood’s first major prize show on the road to the Academy Awards has plenty of heavy drama for the hard times we live in.

Three films with war-on-terror angles scored nominations, led by critical darling “The Hurt Locker,” which is among best dramatic picture contenders.

Also competing Sunday for that honor is the tough Harlem drama “Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ By Sapphire” and the recession-era tale “Up in the Air,” while roles that nabbed acting nominations include a serial killer (Stanley Tucci in “The Lovely Bones”), a Nazi Jew hunter (Christoph Waltz in “Inglourious Basterds”) and a suicidal academic (Colin Firth in “A Single Man”).

The lineup for best dramatic actress features newcomers Gabourey Sidibe as an illiterate, abused teen in “Precious” and Carey Mulligan as a teen who jeopardizes her future through an affair with an older man in “An Education.” Mo’Nique is the supporting-actress favorite as a vile welfare mother in “Precious.”

Sure, there’s plenty of cheerier fare such as “The Hangover” and “Julie & Julia” to lighten things up, along with nominations for big action crowd-pleasers such as “Avatar” and “Sherlock Holmes.”

Along with “Avatar,” “The Hurt Locker,” “Precious” and “Up in the Air,” the World War II tale “Inglourious Basterds” is up for best drama.

Two Meryl Streep flicks, the Julia Child plum “Julie & Julia” and the romance “It’s Complicated,” are nominated for best musical or comedy. Also in the running are the romance “(500) Days of Summer,” the morning-after romp “The Hangover” and the musical “Nine.”

Presented by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a relatively small group of about 85 entertainment reporters for overseas outlets, the Globes have a history of spotlighting edgy picks that might go overlooked at other awards shows.

“They’ve made some cool and irreverent choices in the past, and I think ‘The Hangover’ is definitely up there with those,” director Todd Phillips said of his comedy smash about a Vegas bachelor bash gone awry.

Among the contenders are three double nominees: Streep for “Julie & Julia” and “It’s Complicated;” Sandra Bullock for the football drama “The Blind Side” and the romance “The Proposal;” and Matt Damon for the whistle-blower tale “The Informant!” and the South African rugby drama “Invictus.”

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