Fox Searchlight is top film studio at Golden Globes
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[January 12, 2009]

Fox Searchlight is top film studio at Golden Globes

BEVERLY HILLS, Jan 12, 2009 (Reuters via COMTEX) --
Independent film label Fox Searchlight
Pictures racked up more awards than any other movie studio at the Golden Globes
on Sunday thanks to big wins for "Slumdog Millionaire" and "The Wrestler."
The six awards for the studio, which is a unit of Rupert Murdoch's News
Corp, will be key to boosting Searchlight's movie ticket sales in the weeks
leading up to Hollywood's biggest event, the Oscars, next month.
"Slumdog Millionaire," a rags-to-riches tale about a young Indian man who
competes on a TV game show, has raked in nearly $38 million worldwide to date,
mostly in the United States. The movie was the night's big winner with four
awards.
Fox Searchlight's "The Wrestler," which has been released in just a
handful of U.S. theaters so far, has brought in $2.8 million. The movie about a
fallen wrestler earned best actor honors for Mickey Rourke in the starring role
and a best original song award for rocker Bruce Springsteen.
Time Warner Inc unit Warner Bros received five awards, the night's second
biggest number for a studio.
Warner also originally backed "Slumdog Millionaire" through its now
defunct label Warner Independent Pictures, and it distributed "The Dark Knight,"
for which Heath Ledger won a posthumous best supporting actor award for his
portrayal of The Joker from the Batman comics.
The night's third biggest stack of awards went to independent film studio
The Weinstein Company with two Golden Globes for its movies "The Reader" and
"Vicky Cristina Barcelona." Holocaust drama "The Reader" has pulled in $6.5
million worldwide while Woody Allen's "Vicky Cristina Barcelona" has racked up
$80 million in global ticket sales.
Among TV networks, cable TV's HBO was a big winner with seven statuettes,


primarily for its mini-series "John Adams," followed by NBC with three for "30
Rock" and AMC with one for "Mad Men."
Awards can often boost viewership for shows, which in turn attracts
advertising dollars.
HBO is a unit of Time Warner. NBC belongs to the NBC Universal media wing
of General Electric, and AMC is owned by Cablevision Systems Corp..
BBC Films, Dream Works Pictures, General Electric Co's Focus Features,
Walt Disney Co's Miramax Films and Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, Viacom
unit Paramount Vantage and Sony Corp's Sony Pictures Classics each took home one
award.
(Additional reporting by Bob Tourtellotte and Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bill
Trott) Keywords: GOLDENGLOBES STUDIOS/

(nichola.groom@thomsonreuters.com; +1-213-955-6755; Reuters Messaging:
nichola.groom.reuters.com@reuters.net)
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Copyright Thomson Reuters 2009. All rights reserved.
The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including
by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written
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